Lecture 19 - Weber on Charismatic Authority

author: Iván Szelényi, Yale University
recorded by: Yale University
published: June 24, 2012,   recorded: November 2009,   views: 2638
released under terms of: Creative Commons Attribution No Derivatives (CC-BY-ND)
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Charismatic authority, unlike traditional authority, is a revolutionary and unstable form of authority. Weber borrows the religious term of charisma and extends its use to a secular meaning. Audiences and followers believe that charismatic leaders have a close connection to a divine power, have exceptional skills, or are exemplary in some way. Charismatic leaders promise change in the future for the society and also change people's attitudes and values; in this way, charismatic authority is revolutionary in a way that traditional and legal-rational authority are not. However, charisma is unstable and deteriorates if the leader cannot produce the changes he promises or when he confronts the contradictory logics and demands of the other types of authority. There are particular ways--including search, revelation, designation, or heredity--that charismatic successors are identified, but transferring charismatic authority is difficult and not always successful.

Reading assignment:

Weber, Economy and Society, Chapter 3, pp. 241-254; 266-271

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