Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1458Hits:19606122Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID104192
Title ProperNapoleon and the poets
Other Title Informationthe poetic origins of the concept of Charisma
LanguageENG
AuthorDecherf, Jean-Baptiste
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The legend of Napoleon has been widely studied by historians; however, little has been written analysing the ways in which this legend brings something new to the history of political ideas. The poets who yielded to a fascination with the dead emperor offered him 'acceptance by his peers', thus creating a typically Romantic new conception of the great man. But Napoleon, as presented by many of the great Romantic writers, was also the object of an extraordinary collective love and enthusiasm. He was, in the words of Balzac, 'the god of the people' (1935, vol. 8: 448). In other words, what is new, in the poets' idealised memory of Napoleon, is the idea of 'extraordinary domination' (Weber), a domination whose mainspring is radically different from that of conventional domination.
`In' analytical NoteStudies in Ethnicity and Nationalism Vol. 10, No.3; 2010: p.362-376
Journal SourceStudies in Ethnicity and Nationalism Vol. 10, No.3; 2010: p.362-376
Key WordsNapoleon ;  Poets ;  Charisma