Leadership as more of an art than a science.

AuthorReynolds, Amy Zachary
PositionThe Bookshelf - The Dance of Leadership: The Art of Leading Business, Government, and Society - Book review

The Dance of Leadership The Art of Leading Business, Government, and Society Robert B. Denhardt and Janet V. Denhardt M.E. Sharpe Armonk New York 2006, 175pp

What traits define a good leader? Perhaps your answer would include words like intelligent, fair-minded, diligent, or courageous. What traits would you use to describe a "born leader?" This phrase leads one to believe that perhaps this person has characteristics beyond the norm, skills inherent to them as a person. But what qualities or skills makes that so? Would you expect the description of these leaders to include words related to energy, rhythm, or improvisation?

In The Dance of Leadership: The Art of Leading in Business, Government, and Society, authors Robert and Janet Denhardt examine key qualities employed in art, music, and dance and how those skills can help leaders. Having devoted their careers to learning, teaching, and writing about issues relating to public administration, the Denhardts decided to explore a connection to the much alluded to, but seldom discussed, relationship between leadership and art.

The focus of this book can best be summarized with a quote from Colin Powell, "Leadership is the art of accomplishing more than the science of management says is possible." The premise reaches beyond an academic explanation of traits necessary to be a leader to ethereal, or intangible, skills, much harder to define in rational terms. The result is twofold: an exploration of parallel disciplines required in art and leadership and an expansion of the idea that leadership itself can be viewed as an art.

Through in-depth interviews with dancers, choreographers, musicians, actors, and writers, the authors identified many traits important to creating works of art, distinct from those defined in cognitive sciences, but employable in leadership. Then the authors interviewed CEOs, public officials, coaches, and others to understand business-related instances where those traits and disciplines were employed in leadership.

The seven chapters of this book focus on subject areas relating to space, time, energy, rhythm, communication, and improvisation in which art and leadership achieve shared meaning. For example, the ability of a dancer to deliver emotional content that resonates with an audience requires the visualization of space within which human energy moves. This concept has applicability to our everyday lives if we pause to recognize the choreography of moving through our...

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