The Unseen Leader: How History Can Help Us Rethink Leadership

  • 4h 35m
  • Martin Gutmann
  • Springer
  • 2023

The Unseen Leader delivers one simple but immensely powerful point: we need to radically rethink how we discuss leadership.

In this book, American historian Martin Gutmann passionately challenges the received wisdom that history's great leaders were individuals with a proclivity for action and brash words. Drawing on extensive historical scholarship and contemporary leadership theory, Gutmann delves into the journeys of four unknown or misunderstood leaders who achieved remarkable successes in vastly different environments—the Polar North, the deserts of Arabia, the sugar plantations of the Caribbean, and Second World War London. What emerges is an entirely new narrative on leadership. Contrary to the perception of heroic protagonists forging ahead boldly, history's truly great leaders were often precisely those who didn't need to generate excessive noise or activity. Instead, they skillfully minimized dramatic circumstances. Their stories challenge our present-day conception of leadership and can inspire the leaders of tomorrow.

About the Author

Martin Gutmann, Ph.D., is a Professor at the Lucerne School of Business, Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Switzerland.

In this Book

  • Introduction—History and Leadership
  • The Polar Explorer, the Desert Fox, and the Action Fallacy
  • Holiday Trips in the Polar Wastelands. Roald Amundsen
  • Napoleon’s Thorn. Toussaint Louverture
  • “If the women of the English are like her, the men must be like lions.” Gertrude Bell
  • The Myth of the Phoenix and the British Bulldog. Winston Churchill
  • The Story We Tell
  • Chapter Notes

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