Beyond Charismatic Leadership: New York Catholic Women's Movement Contributor(s): Michele Teresa Aronica, R. S. M. (Author) |
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ISBN: 0887381685 ISBN-13: 9780887381683 Publisher: Routledge OUR PRICE: $168.30 Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats Published: November 1987 |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Religion | Institutions & Organizations - Political Science | Political Process - Political Advocacy - Social Science | Social Work |
Dewey: 267.182 |
LCCN: 87010163 |
Physical Information: 210 pages |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: Dorothy Day died recently in New York City. With her death, the Catholic Worker Movement lost the last of its founders and leaders. In this insightful and well-documented study, Aronica answers the question whether and how the Movement has survived beyond the founders. Starting from the notion of charismatic leadership, the author converts the Catholic Worker Movement into a test case for the classical analysis of social organization. Through participant observation, Aronica uncovers and explains the system of power and authority, the process of incorporation and the services provided to the poor by the Catholic Worker Movement. The Movement's paper, the Catholic Worker, was used to help provide a typology of membership categories. The book is more than a study in the transformation of charismatic leadership; it is also a study of the place of radical social thought within American Catholicism. Aronica shows the problems that the church structure has with grass-roots activities. She also illustrates the difficulty that a grass-roots organization has in transforming itself into a functioning bureaucracy. The book adds a new organizational dimension to the growing number of books on social movements. It is well suited for an audience interested in the sociology of religion and for those concerned with a fruitful application of modern ethnographic research to classical frameworks. |
Contributor Bio(s): Aronica, Michele Teresa: - Michele Teresa Aronica is assistant professor of sociology, Saint Joseph's College, North Windham, Maine. She received her Ph.D. from Boston College, and has taught at New York Institute of Technology and Boston College. Since 1978 Aronica has been a member of the Sisters of Mercy in Portland, Maine. |