Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Charismatic leadership through the eyes of foll...
View graph of relations

Charismatic leadership through the eyes of followers

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal article

Published

Standard

Charismatic leadership through the eyes of followers. / Kempster, Steve; Parry, Ken.
In: Strategic HR Review, Vol. 13, No. 1, 13, 2013, p. 20-23.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal article

Harvard

Kempster, S & Parry, K 2013, 'Charismatic leadership through the eyes of followers', Strategic HR Review, vol. 13, no. 1, 13, pp. 20-23. https://doi.org/10.1108/SHR-07-2013-0076

APA

Kempster, S., & Parry, K. (2013). Charismatic leadership through the eyes of followers. Strategic HR Review, 13(1), 20-23. Article 13. https://doi.org/10.1108/SHR-07-2013-0076

Vancouver

Kempster S, Parry K. Charismatic leadership through the eyes of followers. Strategic HR Review. 2013;13(1):20-23. 13. doi: 10.1108/SHR-07-2013-0076

Author

Kempster, Steve ; Parry, Ken. / Charismatic leadership through the eyes of followers. In: Strategic HR Review. 2013 ; Vol. 13, No. 1. pp. 20-23.

Bibtex

@article{57ef4cb40e3f49f295bce5efd0195e3c,
title = "Charismatic leadership through the eyes of followers",
abstract = "Purpose– The purpose of this paper is to try and explain what charismatic leadership might be, by finding out more about the other side of the relationship, the perspective of followers and their attitudes, feelings and responses to leaders. Design/methodology/approach– The authors examined followers' implicit narratives of their lived experiences of charismatic leadership in organizational settings and examined metaphors for this experience.Findings– Most respondents identified with positive affect, a form of love story; a minority experienced negative affect, especially anger; and some experienced both positive and negative emotions. The authors suggest that if one adopts a certain identity within the context of a dramatic narrative, one might be attributed with charismatic qualities by followers. In this way, it is suggested that charismatic leadership might be less a “gift from God” and more a “gift from followers”. Originality/value– Most existing research on charismatic leadership has an essentialist orientation that characterizes it as leader behavior, leader communication or follower dependency. The authors' approach is more discursively oriented. To research charismatic leadership, aesthetic narrative positivism was used, which undertook utilitarian as well as critical method.",
keywords = "leadership , Identity , Charisma , Narrative analysis, Followership",
author = "Steve Kempster and Ken Parry",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1108/SHR-07-2013-0076",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "20--23",
journal = "Strategic HR Review",
issn = "1475-4398",
publisher = "Emerald",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Charismatic leadership through the eyes of followers

AU - Kempster, Steve

AU - Parry, Ken

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Purpose– The purpose of this paper is to try and explain what charismatic leadership might be, by finding out more about the other side of the relationship, the perspective of followers and their attitudes, feelings and responses to leaders. Design/methodology/approach– The authors examined followers' implicit narratives of their lived experiences of charismatic leadership in organizational settings and examined metaphors for this experience.Findings– Most respondents identified with positive affect, a form of love story; a minority experienced negative affect, especially anger; and some experienced both positive and negative emotions. The authors suggest that if one adopts a certain identity within the context of a dramatic narrative, one might be attributed with charismatic qualities by followers. In this way, it is suggested that charismatic leadership might be less a “gift from God” and more a “gift from followers”. Originality/value– Most existing research on charismatic leadership has an essentialist orientation that characterizes it as leader behavior, leader communication or follower dependency. The authors' approach is more discursively oriented. To research charismatic leadership, aesthetic narrative positivism was used, which undertook utilitarian as well as critical method.

AB - Purpose– The purpose of this paper is to try and explain what charismatic leadership might be, by finding out more about the other side of the relationship, the perspective of followers and their attitudes, feelings and responses to leaders. Design/methodology/approach– The authors examined followers' implicit narratives of their lived experiences of charismatic leadership in organizational settings and examined metaphors for this experience.Findings– Most respondents identified with positive affect, a form of love story; a minority experienced negative affect, especially anger; and some experienced both positive and negative emotions. The authors suggest that if one adopts a certain identity within the context of a dramatic narrative, one might be attributed with charismatic qualities by followers. In this way, it is suggested that charismatic leadership might be less a “gift from God” and more a “gift from followers”. Originality/value– Most existing research on charismatic leadership has an essentialist orientation that characterizes it as leader behavior, leader communication or follower dependency. The authors' approach is more discursively oriented. To research charismatic leadership, aesthetic narrative positivism was used, which undertook utilitarian as well as critical method.

KW - leadership

KW - Identity

KW - Charisma

KW - Narrative analysis

KW - Followership

U2 - 10.1108/SHR-07-2013-0076

DO - 10.1108/SHR-07-2013-0076

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 20

EP - 23

JO - Strategic HR Review

JF - Strategic HR Review

SN - 1475-4398

IS - 1

M1 - 13

ER -