Review “Tudoroiu (Univ. of West Indies at St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago) offers a conceptual framework in political psychology that explains the rise of totalitarian political regimes around the globe. He introduces the concept of revolutionary totalitarian personality as part of authoritarian personality literature. … Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.” (S. Mitropolitski, Choice, Vol. 54 (2), October, 2016) Read more Review "If you wonder what Hitler, Mao, Castro, and Chávez share in common, read this book. Tudoroiu shows them to have similar type family upbringings which contribute to similar totalitarian styles of leadership. The book forces you to think differently about revolutions." – Susan Eckstein, Boston University, USA, and author of Back from the Future: Cuba under Castro"In this timely exploration of a complex and nuanced political phenomenon, Theodor Tudoroiu not only dispels the myth that totalitarianism died after the implosion of the Soviet Union but through his exploration of the concept of revolutionary totalitarian personality, challenges dominant perceptions about what constitutes a totalitarian regime. In turn Tudoroiu's engaging exploration of totalitarian regimes offers pointers for the possibilities of new, religious forms of totalitarianism and how they might emerge from otherwise 'traditional' democracies. This book serves as a major theoretical contribution to the study of totalitarian ideology and authority and will be of enduring value to everyone interested in the persistence of totalitarian regimes." – Dr Matt Killingsworth, Lecturer in Politics and International Relations, University of Tasmania, Australia"Dr Theodor Tudoroiu makes a serious attempt to shed light on the nature, texture and consequences of a unique type of leadership: totalitarian dictator. After careful thought and exhaustive research the author settles on the three such leaders representing three distinct cultural, geographic and historical settings: Adolf Hitler, Mao Zedong and Fidel Castro. This well written, exhaustively researched, and pioneering work is destined to become a point of reference on an important but neglected topic." – Constantine P. Danopoulos, President's Scholar and Professor of Political Science, San Jose State University, USA"This multi-layered analysis of totalitarian dictators weaves together an interdisciplinary argument (spanning totalitarianism to political psychology) and comparatively applies it to Hitler, Mao, Castro and (intuitively) Chavez. Understanding leaders able to create highly personalized, charismatic relationships with responsive publics promotes a more mature understanding of non-democratic leadership, a must for contemporary politics." – Carol Strong, Associate Professor, University of Arkansas at Monticello, USA Read more See all Editorial Reviews
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