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E-raamat: Mutiny and Leadership

(Professor Emeritus, Warwick Business School)
  • Formaat: 448 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Apr-2021
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192645395
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: 448 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Apr-2021
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192645395

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Whenever leadership emerges within a group, there will be resistance to that leadership. Discontent may manifest in a number of ways, and action will always be determined by factors such as resource, numbers, time, space, and the legitimacy of the resistance. What, then, turns discontent into mutiny?

Mutiny is often associated with the occasional mis-leadership of the masses by politically inspired hotheads, or a spontaneous and unusually romantic gesture of defiance against a uniquely overbearing military superior. In reality it is seldom either and usually has far more mundane origins, not in the absolute poverty of the subordinates but in the relative poverty of the relationships between leaders and the led in a military situation. The roots of mutiny lie in the leadership skills of a small number of leaders, and what transforms that into a constructive dialogue, or a catastrophic disaster, depends on how the leaders of both sides mobilise their supporters and their networks.

Using contemporary leadership theory to cast a critical light on an array of mutinies throughout history, this book suggests we consider mutiny as a permanent possibility that is further encouraged or discouraged in some contexts. From mutinies in ancient Roman and Greek armies to those that toppled the German and Russian states and forced governments to face their own disastrous policies and changed them forever, this book covers an array of cases across land, sea, and air that still pose a threat to military establishments today. The critical theoretical line also puts into sharp relief the assumption that oftentimes people have little choice in how they respond to circumstances not of their own making. If mutineers could choose to resist what they saw as tyranny, then so can we.
Acknowledgements ix
List of Figures
x
Introduction 1(8)
1 Rethinking Mutiny
9(49)
Denning Mutiny
9(18)
Refrains of Mutiny
27(14)
Explaining Mutinies
41(17)
2 Mutinies in Revolutionary Times
58(40)
Spithead and the Nore, 1797
58(10)
The Nore Mutiny
68(14)
Hermione 1797
82(9)
Potemkin 1905
91(7)
3 Mutinies in War
98(68)
The Christmas Mutiny 1914
98(12)
Russia 1917
110(16)
French Army 1917
126(7)
The German Mutinies 1917-18
133(14)
ANZAC 1916 and Staples 1917
147(4)
Salerno 1943
151(15)
4 Mutinies after War
166(25)
The British Forces 1918-19
166(13)
CanadianForcesl919
179(5)
The Royal Air Force 1946
184(7)
5 Mutinies in Civil Wars
191(23)
English Civil Wars 1646-9
191(13)
Krondstadt 1921
204(10)
6 Mutinies and Ethnicity
214(94)
The British West India Regiment 1801 & 1837
214(4)
The Sepoy Mutiny, the Rebellion, and the 1st Indian War of Independence 1857-8
218(39)
The Curragh 1914
257(6)
Singapore 1915
263(16)
The British Army Labour Corps & Foreign Battalions 1917-1918
279(4)
Port Chicago 1944
283(15)
The Royal Indian Navy 1946
298(10)
7 Dystopian and Utopian Mutinies
308(34)
The Batavia 1629
308(12)
HMS Bounty
320(13)
FFG Storozhevoy
333(9)
8 Mutinies against Austerity
342(17)
The Chilean Navy and Invergordon 1931
342(17)
9 The Erosion, Breaking, and Betrayal of the Moral Economy: A Reflection on Mutinies, Mutineers, and Leadership
359(10)
References 369(15)
Index 384
Keith Grint is Professor Emeritus at Warwick University where he was Professor of Public Leadership until 2018. He has held Chairs at Cranfield University and Lancaster University and was Director of the Lancaster Leadership Centre. He spent twelve years at the University of Oxford and was Director of Research at the Saïd Business School. His recent books include Leadership, Management & Command: Rethinking D-Day (2008); Sage Handbook of Leadership (edited with Alan Bryman, David Collinson, Brad Jackson, and Mary Uhl-Bien) (2010); and Leadership: A Very Short Introduction (2010).