TY - BOOK AU - Andrews-Lee,Caitlin TI - The emergence and revival of charismatic movements: Argentine Peronism and Venezuelan Chavismo SN - 9781108917353 (ebook) AV - BF698.9.P6 A53 2021 U1 - 320.01/4 23 PY - 2021/// CY - Cambridge PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Perón, Juan Domingo, KW - Chávez Frías, Hugo. KW - Personality and politics KW - Case studies KW - Populism KW - Venezuela KW - Peronism KW - Political psychology KW - Political leadership KW - Psychological aspects KW - Charisma (Personality trait) KW - Political aspects KW - Argentina KW - Politics and government KW - 1943- KW - 1999- N1 - Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 09 Jul 2021); A theory of charismatic movement revival -- The formation of charismatic attachments -- The survival of charismatic attachments -- The reactivation of charismatic attachments -- The politics of succession in charismatic movements -- The spasmodic trajectories of charismatic movements -- Theoretical implications and broader conclusions N2 - Political movements founded by charismatic leaders are often considered ephemeral. Existing literature argues that because they rest on unmediated, emotional attachments between leaders and followers, these movements either fade quickly after their leaders disappear or transform into routinized parties. Yet, charismatic movements around the world have proven surprisingly resilient and have retained their personalistic core. Focusing on Argentine Peronism and Venezuelan Chavismo, this book investigates the nature and trajectory of charismatic movements from the perspectives of both leaders and followers. Using interviews, focus groups, and survey experiments, Caitlin Andrews-Lee reveals that charismatic movements can emerge, survive, and become politically revived by sustaining - not discarding - their personalistic character. Followers' charismatic attachments to the movement founder can develop into an enduring, deeply affective political identity that successors can reactivate under certain conditions by portraying themselves as symbolic reincarnations of the founder. Consequently, charismatic movements can have lasting, deleterious effects on democracy UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108917353 ER -