The Catholic Worker, Dorothy Day, and Exemplary Anarchism^45
- Day, Loaves and Fishes, 142.
- O’Connor, The Moral Vision of Dorothy Day, 80.
- William D. Miller, Dorothy Day: A Biography (San Francisco,
CA: Harper & Row, 1982), 484. - McKanan, The Catholic Worker after Dorothy, 23.
- McKanan, The Catholic Worker after Dorothy, 24.
- Piehl, Breaking Bread, 243.
- Michele Teresa Aronica, Beyond Charismatic Leadership: The
New York Catholic Worker Movement (Piscataway, NJ: Transaction
Publishers, 1988). - McKanan, The Catholic Worker after Dorothy, 27.
- Since the main objective here is determining the relationship
of Day (and to a lesser extent Maurin) to the rest of the Catholic
Worker movement, I focus on the mainstream, leader-centered read-
ing of Weber’s theory of charisma—the interpretation he empha-
sized towards the end of his life. I wish to acknowledge, however,
the possibility of deriving from Weber’s earlier work a theory of col-
lective charisma in the form of charismatic social movements. See
Andreas Kalyvas, Democracy and the Politics of the Extraordinary:
Max Weber, Carl Schmitt, Hannah Arendt (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2008). - Max Weber, Economy and Society: An Outline of Interpretive
Sociology (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1978), 954. - Weber, Economy and Society, 1112.
- Weber, Economy and Society, 1113.
- Weber, Economy and Society, 1115.
- Weber, Economy and Society, 1117.
- Weber, Economy and Society, 1112.
- Weber, Economy and Society, 1113.
- Weber, Economy and Society, 1114.
- Weber, Economy and Society, 1121.