All in the Name of Revolution: Fidel Castro, Charisma and the Personalized Institutionalization of Cuba
Author(s)
Di Piramo, Daniela
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2008
Metadata
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According to Max Weber, charismatic leaders are extraordinary individuals who have the ability to mobilise their followers on the strength of their personal attributes; endowed as they are with authority that is as powerful and tumultuous as it is fleeting, they often challenge the status quo and thereby claim their place in history as revolutionaries. In practice, revolutions are problematic political processes for these leaders: they favour the pursuit of their goals outside institutional boundaries, but as their power is usually transient, practical and structural constraints oblige them to engage with the institutional ...
View more >According to Max Weber, charismatic leaders are extraordinary individuals who have the ability to mobilise their followers on the strength of their personal attributes; endowed as they are with authority that is as powerful and tumultuous as it is fleeting, they often challenge the status quo and thereby claim their place in history as revolutionaries. In practice, revolutions are problematic political processes for these leaders: they favour the pursuit of their goals outside institutional boundaries, but as their power is usually transient, practical and structural constraints oblige them to engage with the institutional system in order to keep the charismatic relationship alive, albeit in diluted form. Most importantly, institutionalisation is a way of delivering and preserving socio-political change. Nobody understood this better than the recently retired Fidel Castro who, in spite of his disdain for impersonal institutions and his dislike of the bureaucracy, set out to institutionalise the Cuban revolution and cultivate revolutionary consciousness in Cuban society by presenting the revolution to the people as part of a greater historical movement against tyranny and oppression, a progressive struggle for which every participant is rewarded with membership in the creation of a new superior social order. In contrast to explanations that emphasise lust for personal power, this paper argues that Castro's primary aim was to ensure that the ideals underpinning the revolution would outlast the short-lived enthusiasm of personal transitory attachments. However, this process of 'personalised institutionalisation' has led to a paradoxical predicament: the imposition of revolutionary ideals on Cuba's civil society means that those ideals can no longer be logically defined as progressive. Subsequently, as the means undermine the end, the power relations that underlie this political process have turned out to be almost as oppressive as those that they are meant to challenge, thereby illustrating the antithetical and self-defeating nature of revolutions from above.
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View more >According to Max Weber, charismatic leaders are extraordinary individuals who have the ability to mobilise their followers on the strength of their personal attributes; endowed as they are with authority that is as powerful and tumultuous as it is fleeting, they often challenge the status quo and thereby claim their place in history as revolutionaries. In practice, revolutions are problematic political processes for these leaders: they favour the pursuit of their goals outside institutional boundaries, but as their power is usually transient, practical and structural constraints oblige them to engage with the institutional system in order to keep the charismatic relationship alive, albeit in diluted form. Most importantly, institutionalisation is a way of delivering and preserving socio-political change. Nobody understood this better than the recently retired Fidel Castro who, in spite of his disdain for impersonal institutions and his dislike of the bureaucracy, set out to institutionalise the Cuban revolution and cultivate revolutionary consciousness in Cuban society by presenting the revolution to the people as part of a greater historical movement against tyranny and oppression, a progressive struggle for which every participant is rewarded with membership in the creation of a new superior social order. In contrast to explanations that emphasise lust for personal power, this paper argues that Castro's primary aim was to ensure that the ideals underpinning the revolution would outlast the short-lived enthusiasm of personal transitory attachments. However, this process of 'personalised institutionalisation' has led to a paradoxical predicament: the imposition of revolutionary ideals on Cuba's civil society means that those ideals can no longer be logically defined as progressive. Subsequently, as the means undermine the end, the power relations that underlie this political process have turned out to be almost as oppressive as those that they are meant to challenge, thereby illustrating the antithetical and self-defeating nature of revolutions from above.
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Conference Title
All in the Name of Revolution: Fidel Castro, Charisma and the Personalized Institutionalization of Cuba
Subject
Political Theory and Political Philosophy