| Ch. 1 | Introduction : teaching British women writers, 1750-1900 | 1 |
| Ch. 2 | We can do it! : putting women's texts of work | 11 |
| Ch. 3 | Teaching a "highly exceptional" text : Krupabai Sattianadhan's Saguna and narratives of empire | 20 |
| Ch. 4 | Teaching English women's conversionist rhetoric | 33 |
| Ch. 5 | Eliza Haywood : mainstreaming women writers in the undergraduate survey | 44 |
| Ch. 6 | The poetry of friendship : connecting the histories of women and Lesbian sexuality in the undergraduate classroom | 59 |
| Ch. 7 | A subversive urn and a suicidal bridge : strategies for reading across aesthetic difference | 74 |
| Ch. 8 | Pedagogy and oppositions : teaching non-canonical British women writers at the technical university | 91 |
| Ch. 9 | Short fiction by women in the Victorian literature survey | 101 |
| Ch. 10 | "This particular Web" : George Eliot, Emily Eden, and locale in multiplot fiction | 110 |
| Ch. 11 | Making the student a scholar | 121 |
| Ch. 12 | Beyond "great crowds" and "minor triumphs" : teaching students to evaluate critical pronouncements | 127 |
| Ch. 13 | Teaching women playwrights from the British romantic period (1790-1840) | 140 |
| Ch. 14 | Working within a community of learners : teaching Christian Rossetti at a Christian college | 150 |
| Ch. 15 | Canon-busting : undergraduate research into Romantic-era women's writing in the corvey collection | 160 |
| Ch. 16 | Teaching "recovered" Victorian female intellectuals | 165 |
| Ch. 17 | Everybody learns and everybody teaches : feminist pedagogy and co-editing Mary Ward's Marcella | 181 |
| Ch. 18 | "Can man be free/and women be a slave?" : teaching eighteenth- and nineteenth-century women writers in intersecting communities | 190 |
| Ch. 19 | Who counts? : popularity, modern recovery, and the early nineteenth-century women poet | 205 |
| Ch. 20 | Changing course(s) at mid- and late career : teaching the lives/teaching the works/teaching the teacher | 224 |