Charisma
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For other uses, see Charisma (disambiguation).
The word charisma (from the Greek word χάρισμα (kharisma), "gift" or "divine favor," from kharizesthai, "to favor," from kharis, "favor") refers to a rare trait found in certain human personalities usually including extreme charm and a "magnetic" quality of personality and/or appearance along with innate and powerfully sophisticated personal communicability and persuasiveness; in short, charisma is often used to describe a seemingly uncanny ability to charm or influence people. It refers especially to a quality in certain people who easily draw the attention and admiration (or even hatred if the charisma is negative) of others due to a "magnetic" quality of personality and/or appearance. Though the term as it stands is extremely difficult to define, other similar terms/phrases related to charisma include: grace, exuberance, equanimity, mystique, positive energy, joie de vivre, extreme charm, personal magnetism, personal appeal, "electricity," and allure, among many others[1]. Another term constantly used is the "X-factor." Usually many of these qualities must be present within a single individual for the person to be considered highly charismatic by the public and their peers.
Despite the strong emotions they so often induce in others, charismatic individuals generally project unusual calmness, confidence, assertiveness, dominance, authenticity, and focus, and almost always possess superb communication and/or oratorical skills. To the early Greeks, charisma was said to be "a divine favor/gift" or "gift of grace," implying that this "divine quality" was an inborn trait; today however, many believe it can be taught and/or learned, despite the persistent inability to accurately define or even fully understand the concept.
Contents |
[edit] The psychology of charisma
The study, recognition, and development of charisma in individuals is of particular interest to sociologists/psychologists, popular (usually national) politicians, public speakers, actors, movie-stars/movie-producers, casting directors, pop-music stars, trainers/coaches targeting the upper-echelons of the business community (CEOs), and academics or others involved in leadership studies or leadership development, among others. [2]
In some cases highly-extroverted and brutally controlling charismatic leaders have used their personal charisma in extremely destructive and damaging ways throughout human history, for example, Adolf Hitler and Jim Jones.
The German sociologist Max Weber defined charismatic authority to be one of three forms of authority, the other two being traditional (feudal) authority and legal or rational authority. According to Weber, charisma is defined thus:
a certain quality of an individual personality, by virtue of which s/he is "set apart" from ordinary people and treated as endowed with supernatural, superhuman, or at least specifically exceptional powers or qualities. These as such are not accessible to the ordinary person, but are regarded as divine in origin or as exemplary, and on the basis of them the individual concerned is treated as a leader.[3]
Pierre Bourdieu did not have a very different position from that of Weber's, but he stressed that a leader has charisma only if other people accept that s/he has it. Bourdieu argued that charisma usually depends on an "inaugural act" such as a decisive battle or moving speech after which the charismatic person will be regarded as such.
Charisma has also been studied as a set of behaviors/traits; for example, a modern psychological approach posits that charisma is basically aggregative, a conglomeration of distinct personality traits that meld well in certain individuals to form the broad quality known as charisma. Theatrically, charisma can sometimes be "performed" on-stage and in films, and is encapsulated in both verbal and non-verbal communication.
Professor Richard Wiseman says that a charismatic person has three attributes:
- they feel emotions themselves quite strongly;
- they induce them in others;
- and they are impervious to the influences of other charismatic people. [4]
These are Professor Wiseman's tips on how to be more charismatic [5]
"General: Open body posture, hands away from face when talking, stand up straight, relax, hands apart with palms forwards or upwards
To an individual: Let people know they matter and you enjoy being around them, develop a genuine smile, nod when they talk, briefly touch them on the upper arm, and maintain eye contact
To a group: Be comfortable as leader, move around to appear enthusiastic, lean slightly forward and look at all parts of the group
Message: Move beyond status quo and make a difference, be controversial, new, simple to understand, counter-intuitive
Speech: Be clear, fluent, forceful and articulate, evoke imagery, use an upbeat tempo, occasionally slow for tension or emphasis"
[edit] Other uses
Charisma is also commonly referred to in role-playing games, being one of the abilities of a character. Charismatic ability modifies dice rolls concerning communication, persuasion, lying, inspiring trust in others, etc.
The former NWA World Heavyweight Champion Christian Cage is also known as "Captain Charisma" in his World Wrestling Entertainment and TNA career. Jeff Hardy, also a professional wrestler is currently known as "The Charismatic Enigma" since his debut in TNA
The hard rock band KISS has a song called "Charisma" on their 1979 album, "Dynasty"
[edit] See also
[edit] As "divine favor"
- Charismatic movement
- Divine grace
- Enlightenment (concept)
- Genius
- Guru
- Pentecostalism
- Prophet
- Religious ecstasy
- Sanctification
- Shaman
- Tzadik
[edit] As "personal appeal"
- Charismatic authority
- Cool (aesthetic)
- Crowd psychology
- Cult of personality
- Demagogue
- Ecstasy (emotion)
- Eloquence
- Empathy
- Leadership
- List of charismatic leaders (uses Max Weber's definition as a basis)
- Power (sociology)
- Rapport
- Sex appeal
- Sex symbol
[edit] References
- ^ Thesaurus — alternate terms for "charisma"
- ^ The Psychology of Charisma — from Psychology Today magazine
- ^ * Dr David Boje, Charisma lecture notes, Leadership & Society course at New Mexico State University College of Business Administration & Economics, Retrieved 28 July 2005.
- ^ Charisma: a step-by-step guide -- from BBC News
- ^ Charisma: a step-by-step guide -- from BBC News
[edit] External links
- The X-Factors of Success from Psychology Today
- The Character of Charisma from whyfiles.org, a 4 part series
- Max Weber and Charisma
- Charismatic Authority from about.com
- Why Charisma Matters from Tony Alessandra Ph.D.
- Charisma from vocalist.org
- Charisma FAQ
- Charisma by Thomas Robbin in the Encyclopedia of Religion and Society, edited by William H. Swatos: ISBN 0-7619-8956-0
- Toward a Theory of the Routinization of Charisma — April 1972
- The science of savoir faire