Charisma (Graece χάρισμα 'donum gratiae', 'favor libere datus' < χάρις 'gratia'[1][2]) est lepor vel venustas cogens, quae studium aliis inicere potest.[3]
↑James MacGregor Burns, Leadership (Open Road Media, 2012), ISBN 9781453245170.
↑J. V. Downton, Rebel Leadership: Commitment and Charisma in the Revolutionary Process (Novi Eboraci: The Free Press, 1973)
↑B. M. Bass, Leadership and performance beyond expectations (Novi Eboraci: The Free Press, 1985).
↑R. J. House, "A 1976 Theory of Charismatic Leadership," In [The Cutting Edge, ed. J. G. Hunt et L. L. Larson (Carbondale: Southern Illinois: University Press, 1977), 189–207).
Antonakis, John, Nicolas Bastardoz, Philippe Jacquart, et Boas Shamir. 2016. "An Ill-Defined and Ill-Measured Gift." Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior 3: 293–319. doi:10.1146/annurev-orgpsych-041015-062305. Editio interretialis.
Browning, W. R. F. "Spiritual gifts." In A Dictionary of the Bible, ed. secunda. Oxoniae: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199543992, ISBN 978-0199543991.
Grabo, Allen, Brian R. Spisak, et Mark Van Vugt. 2017. "Charisma as signal: An evolutionary perspective on charismatic leadership." The Leadership Quarterly 28 (4): 473–85. doi:10.1016/j.leaqua.2017.05.001.
Joosse, Paul. 2014. "Becoming a God: Max Weber and the social construction of charisma." Journal of Classical Sociology 14 (3): 266–83. doi=10.1177/1468795X14536652.