The Breakaway Boss: Semiperipheral Innovations and the Rise of Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad
<p><em>Within a year of becoming president of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad had already confused much of the world. Explanations of his political ascent in a semi-peripheral country rely largely on the concept of charismatic authority. This is a non-explanation, howe...
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doaj-66bee286753b41aaa3a0bf1c11bfc4882020-11-25T00:32:53ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghJournal of World-Systems Research1076-156X2015-08-0121241744710.5195/jwsr.2015.137The Breakaway Boss: Semiperipheral Innovations and the Rise of Mahmoud AhmadinezhadKevan Harris0University of California-Los Angeles<p><em>Within a year of becoming president of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad had already confused much of the world. Explanations of his political ascent in a semi-peripheral country rely largely on the concept of charismatic authority. This is a non-explanation, however, as the charismatic historical figure who seemingly holds creative command over the social world also has to be created. Instead, I argue that Ahmadinezhad’s trajectory from an Islamist engineering student to the presidency of a post-revolutionary state highlights three mechanisms of social-political innovation that are bounded by space and time: the situated overlap of social capital, the paradox of vertical clientage, and the breakaway of the machine boss</em>. <em>These mechanisms are usually misread as timeless signifiers of national backwardness or as charismatic </em>dei ex machina. <em>By showing these mechanisms at work through biography, we can challenge scholarly and popular explanations of social change that implicitly rehash modernization theory.</em></p>http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/13 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Kevan Harris |
spellingShingle |
Kevan Harris The Breakaway Boss: Semiperipheral Innovations and the Rise of Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad Journal of World-Systems Research |
author_facet |
Kevan Harris |
author_sort |
Kevan Harris |
title |
The Breakaway Boss: Semiperipheral Innovations and the Rise of Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad |
title_short |
The Breakaway Boss: Semiperipheral Innovations and the Rise of Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad |
title_full |
The Breakaway Boss: Semiperipheral Innovations and the Rise of Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad |
title_fullStr |
The Breakaway Boss: Semiperipheral Innovations and the Rise of Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Breakaway Boss: Semiperipheral Innovations and the Rise of Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad |
title_sort |
breakaway boss: semiperipheral innovations and the rise of mahmoud ahmadinezhad |
publisher |
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh |
series |
Journal of World-Systems Research |
issn |
1076-156X |
publishDate |
2015-08-01 |
description |
<p><em>Within a year of becoming president of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinezhad had already confused much of the world. Explanations of his political ascent in a semi-peripheral country rely largely on the concept of charismatic authority. This is a non-explanation, however, as the charismatic historical figure who seemingly holds creative command over the social world also has to be created. Instead, I argue that Ahmadinezhad’s trajectory from an Islamist engineering student to the presidency of a post-revolutionary state highlights three mechanisms of social-political innovation that are bounded by space and time: the situated overlap of social capital, the paradox of vertical clientage, and the breakaway of the machine boss</em>. <em>These mechanisms are usually misread as timeless signifiers of national backwardness or as charismatic </em>dei ex machina. <em>By showing these mechanisms at work through biography, we can challenge scholarly and popular explanations of social change that implicitly rehash modernization theory.</em></p> |
url |
http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/13 |
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