Cult of Personality: Difference between revisions

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== Music ==
== Music ==
* The song "Cult of Personality" by Living Colour explores the phenomenon from the point of view of the subject of such a cult, but includes comments that are subversive of the purpose of a Cult of Personality, encouraging the listener to break free from the groupthink in which they're trapped.
* The song "Cult of Personality" by Living Colour explores the phenomenon from the point of view of the subject of such a cult, but includes comments that are subversive of the purpose of a Cult of Personality, encouraging the listener to break free from the groupthink in which they're trapped.
* Tommy, from the [[Rock Opera]] of [[Tommy|the same name]] by [[The Who]], seems to involuntarily inspire a Cult of Personality around himself while he is unware of the world at large. Ultimately this is a [[Subverted Trope|subversion]], though, because when he regains his senses and tries to actually inspire and ''use'' his cult following, they turn on him.


== Myths and Legends ==
== Myths and Legends ==

Revision as of 02:54, 31 January 2017

Our Glorious Leader loves and protects you! It's your duty to love him back!

I sell the things you need to be
I'm the smiling face on your T.V.
I'm the cult of personality
I exploit you still you love me
I tell you one and one makes three
I'm the cult of personality
Like Joseph Stalin and Gandhi

I'm the cult of personality
Living Colour, "Cult of Personality"

A Cult of Personality arises when an individual uses mass media, propaganda, or other methods to create an idealized, heroic, and at times worshipful image, often through unquestioning flattery and praise. A Cult of Personality is similar in some ways to A God Am I, except that it is established in the minds of others by mass media and propaganda usually by the state, especially in Totalitarian (or sometimes Authoritarian) states. (And its subject rarely possesses the powers of a god, although he will in many cases make claims to them anyway -- see some of the more outlandish stories circulated about the Kim family of North Korea.)

A Cult of Personality is a deliberate attempt to invoke the old and discredited concept of the Divine Right of Kings for modern rulers, by painting them as greater-than-human figures who can make no mistakes and do no wrong. They are generally perpetuated to give a nation or people a focus during a period of trouble or transition, by turning its subject into a benevolent "guide" who will bring them into a new, better era by way of a revolutionary transformation that could not happen without his unique oversight and all-embracing love for the common people. The process usually paints them as some variety of Memetic Badass in Charge along the way as well.

It helps a great deal if the leader in question has some measure of charisma, but if he lets the press do all the speaking for him and limits himself to posing for inspiring photographs and paintings, it won't matter.

Anywhere in fiction and Real Life where you see people fanatically devoted to a leader rather than an ideology or a cause, you're probably looking at a Cult of Personality. This is a common tool of the Glorious Leader and The Generalissimo, and the effort to start up (or expand) a Cult of Personality is almost always one of the first priorities after a Tyrant Takes the Helm.

While the phrase has been in use since the early 19th century, it was first applied in a political sense by Karl Marx in 1877; it was further popularized by Nikita Khrushchev in 1956, in a speech he gave criticizing the near-deification of Josef Stalin.

Although we won't turn down Real World examples, why bother? Wikipedia already has a very comprehensive and detailed list of real-world cults of personality.

See also Glorious Leader, The Generalissimo. Compare Propaganda Machine.

Examples of Cult of Personality include:

Advertising

Anime and Manga

Comic Books

Fan Works

Film

  • R'as al Ghul in Batman Begins has a literal cult built up around him.

Literature

  • In Nineteen Eighty-Four, the party has built up a cult of personality around Big Brother -- although less as a figure of cultural salvation than as a figure of omniscience and omnipotence.
  • Napoleon in Animal Farm, as evidenced by Boxer's motto "If Comrade Napoleon says it, it must be right."
  • The Wizard in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz has a Cult of Personality that extends to the far reaches of Oz, and even takes in the very real witches from whom he hides. Whether this cult is an intentional tactic or grew around him on its own is hard to say for sure, given the later Oz books' rather sketchy grasp of continuity. However, given how The Land of Oz (the second book) describes him kidnapping and hiding the legitimate heir to the throne of Oz, it seems likely the cult of the Wizard was orchestrated and cultivated.

Live-Action Television

Music

  • The song "Cult of Personality" by Living Colour explores the phenomenon from the point of view of the subject of such a cult, but includes comments that are subversive of the purpose of a Cult of Personality, encouraging the listener to break free from the groupthink in which they're trapped.
  • Tommy, from the Rock Opera of the same name by The Who, seems to involuntarily inspire a Cult of Personality around himself while he is unware of the world at large. Ultimately this is a subversion, though, because when he regains his senses and tries to actually inspire and use his cult following, they turn on him.

Myths and Legends

Newspaper Comics

Oral Tradition

Pinball

Podcasts

Professional Wrestling

Puppet Shows

Radio

Tabletop Games

  • "Trust the Computer! The Computer is your friend!" Among all the other things included the 24-hour propaganda in Paranoia's Alpha Complex is a heavy dose of personality cult centered on the Computer.

Theater

Video Games

Western Animation

Web Animation

Web Comics

Web Video

Other Media

Real Life

  • Practically every dictator or other authoritarian head of state in the last century or so has at least attempted to grow a Cult of Personality around themselves; many, like Nicolae Ceaușescu and Josip Broz Tito were successful, at least in the relative short run. However, the two most prominent examples have to be Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin. It's hard to decide which of them is the Trope Codifier, although both qualify for the role; perhaps they both are, collectively.
  • The Kim family, rulers of North Korea. The state-owned press in North Korea is effusive in its unending praise when it comes to covering them, to the point that to outsiders it seems almost like an embarrassing parody. For instance, despite the Communist rejection of religion all the Kims are and have been painted as semi-divine, "a great person born of heaven". The latest Kim, Kim Jong-un, is a case in point. Everything good that happens is because of him; everything bad that is even reported is a defiance of the natural order because it flies in the face of Kim's intentions for the land and people.