Mutiny and Leadership
Autor Keith Grinten Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 aug 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198931577
ISBN-10: 0198931573
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 171 x 246 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198931573
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 171 x 246 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Mutineers rebel against leaders: kings, ship commanders, and other authority figures. At the same time, they generate their own internal leadership. For every HMS Bounty Commander William Bligh, there is a rebellious Fletcher Christian. It is at that nexus of leadership in extremis that Grint focuses this startlingly insightful tour de force. As one of our foremost critical leadership scholars, Grint is well positioned to bring to light the collective agency mobilized by mutiny leaders and the opportunities for both disaster and renewal that any rebellion against authority offers.
In this outstanding book Keith Grint reveals the value of critically researching mutiny: a subject that up until now has been significantly under-explored. He presents a rich and detailed historical analysis that confirms how those in subordinate positions in various eras and contexts have proactively engaged in open defiance, dissent, resistance and mutiny. Drawing on various case studies illustrating the diverse nature of mutiny, Grint skilfully demonstrates that subordinates are far from being the passive and conformist 'followers' that leader-centric leadership studies typically assume. He also shows how studying mutiny is a great way to examine leadership. This wide-ranging text is important reading for those working in various disciplines from sociology and history to leadership, organisation and management studies. Highly recommended!
In Mutiny and Leadership Keith Grint guides us through the major theories, concepts and explanations of mutiny enabling us, through the beautifully told page turning narratives, to make the connection between the social context, superordinate, the subordinate and the mutineer both superordinate and subordinate. [...] This book questions if military commanders are leaders, some are shown to be and others rely on 'command' their positional authority, when this is rejected by subordinates the conditions are set for mutiny. The conditions for mutiny create the conditions for emergent leadership, those who lead the mutiny, often filling the leadership void. Keith deals with this in his poignant conclusion or final reflective chapter. I enjoyed reading this book, a journey of learning, and strongly recommend it to scholars of the military art and those curious about leadership and what happens when it fails.
Through an exhaustive historical analysis of episodes of mutiny, Professor Keith Grint's book uncovers the deep-rooted relationship between leadership and resistance. An intellectual tour de force, this book is wonderfully written, unique in its historical detail, and far-reaching when it comes to its theoretical consequences.
Keith Grint always asks the tough but critically important questions about leadership, always essential for understanding how power in societies and organisations works. Here we get a close and rigorously researched view into why and how the most extreme forms of resistance - mutiny - occur through and against leadership. With the world facing many bleak turns, this book could unfortunately prove essential reading.
In this outstanding book Keith Grint reveals the value of critically researching mutiny: a subject that up until now has been significantly under-explored. He presents a rich and detailed historical analysis that confirms how those in subordinate positions in various eras and contexts have proactively engaged in open defiance, dissent, resistance and mutiny. Drawing on various case studies illustrating the diverse nature of mutiny, Grint skilfully demonstrates that subordinates are far from being the passive and conformist 'followers' that leader-centric leadership studies typically assume. He also shows how studying mutiny is a great way to examine leadership. This wide-ranging text is important reading for those working in various disciplines from sociology and history to leadership, organisation and management studies. Highly recommended!
In Mutiny and Leadership Keith Grint guides us through the major theories, concepts and explanations of mutiny enabling us, through the beautifully told page turning narratives, to make the connection between the social context, superordinate, the subordinate and the mutineer both superordinate and subordinate. [...] This book questions if military commanders are leaders, some are shown to be and others rely on 'command' their positional authority, when this is rejected by subordinates the conditions are set for mutiny. The conditions for mutiny create the conditions for emergent leadership, those who lead the mutiny, often filling the leadership void. Keith deals with this in his poignant conclusion or final reflective chapter. I enjoyed reading this book, a journey of learning, and strongly recommend it to scholars of the military art and those curious about leadership and what happens when it fails.
Through an exhaustive historical analysis of episodes of mutiny, Professor Keith Grint's book uncovers the deep-rooted relationship between leadership and resistance. An intellectual tour de force, this book is wonderfully written, unique in its historical detail, and far-reaching when it comes to its theoretical consequences.
Keith Grint always asks the tough but critically important questions about leadership, always essential for understanding how power in societies and organisations works. Here we get a close and rigorously researched view into why and how the most extreme forms of resistance - mutiny - occur through and against leadership. With the world facing many bleak turns, this book could unfortunately prove essential reading.
Notă biografică
Keith Grint is Professor Emeritus at Warwick University where he was Professor of Public Leadership until 2018. He has held Chairs at Cranfield University and Lancaster University and was Director of the Lancaster Leadership Centre. He spent twelve years at the University of Oxford and was Director of Research at the Saïd Business School. His recent books include Leadership, Management & Command: Rethinking D-Day (2008); Sage Handbook of Leadership (edited with Alan Bryman, David Collinson, Brad Jackson, and Mary Uhl-Bien) (2010); Leadership: A Very Short Introduction (2010) and Leadership: Limits and Possibilities 2nd edition (with Owain Smolovic Jones) (2022). His latest book is A Cartography of Resistance: Leadership, Management, and Command (OUP 2024).