Daniel S. Malachuk

Assistant Professor
Nineteenth-century literature and political theory
Ph.D., Rutgers University
Based at the Quad Cities campus of WIU, Daniel S. Malachuk teaches a variety of courses in support of the Bachelor and Master of Liberal Arts & Sciences, the English minor, the English MA, and General Education. He received his BA from Bowdoin College (1989) and his PhD from Rutgers University (1996). Prior to coming to WIU-QC in 2007, he taught writing and humanities at Daniel Webster College (1997-2005), political theory at Georgetown and George Washington Universities (2006), and literature at American University (2006-07).
His research is in nineteenth-century literature and political theory.
Books
Articles
- "Romola and Victorian Liberalism," Victorian Literature and Culture 36.1 (Fall 2008) 83-99
- "Transcendentalism, Perfectionism, and Walden," The Concord Saunterer New Series, 12/1 (2004/2005) 283-303
- "Labor, Leisure, and the Yeoman in Coleridge's and Wordsworth's 1790s Writings," Romanticism on the Net (August 2002)
- "Coleridge's Republicanism and the Aphorism in Aids to Reflection," Studies in Romanticism 39.2 (Winter 2000) 397-417
- "Loyal to a Dream Country: Republicanism and the Pragmatism of William James and Richard Rorty," Journal of American Studies 34.1 (April 2000) 89-113
- "Walt Whitman and the Culture of Pragmatism," Walt Whitman Quarterly Review, 17: 1/2 (November 1999) 60-68
- "The Republican Philosophy of Emerson's Early Lectures," The New England Quarterly 71:3 (September 1998) 404-428
Chapters
- "'A Still More Perfect and Glorious State': Thoreau's Maine," in M. Burke, ed., Maine's Place in the Environmental Imagination (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2008).
- "Nationalist Cosmopolitics in the Nineteenth Century," in D. Morgan and G. Banham, eds., Cosmopolitics and the Emergence of a Future (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007) 139-162
- "Cultural Studies, Compassion, and the Promise of Community-Based Learning," in S. Danielson and A. Fallon, eds., Community-Based Learning and the Work of Literature (Bolton: Anker Press, 2007) 26-45
- "John Stuart Mill's Platform Populism, the Republican Tradition, and Victorian Liberalism" in M. Hewett, ed., Platform-Pulpit-Rhetoric (Leeds: Leeds Centre for Victorian Studies, 2000) 110-121
Reviews
Forthcoming essays include examinations of William James as an environmentalist, Henry David Thoreau's "higher use" environmentalism, Matthew Arnold's critique of American democracy, and lingering transcendentalism in novels by American realists. A book on higher law and the political theory of American Transcendentalism is also in progress.
| Email | ds-malachuk@wiu.edu |
| Office | 287 WIU Quad Cities: 309-762-9481 |
| Office hours | Fall 2009 T 12-2, W 12-1, Th 12-1 |