We are facing a crisis. There is a growing consensus that the situation is dire—and looking bleaker every day. Almost everyone has contributed to the problem, and everyone is a victim of it.
This catastrophe? The "coarsening of America," as our pandemic of rudeness has been called. And if it seems alarmist to speak of rudeness in catastrophic terms, consider some of the arguments advanced by those who do: that incivility costs the nation more than $100 billion a year in accidents on the road, that billions more are lost to diminished productivity at work, and that many acts of violence have their origins in acts of rudeness. And beyond the physical damage, they say, there is reason to believe that rampant incivility is damaging to the soul. Humans are deeply social creatures, after all, so it seems logical that good social relations should improve our lives.
Armed with such logic, a coalition of the hopeful is trying to buck the rude trend, even to reverse it. They are fighting, you might say, a civil war, and if they succeed, then perhaps someday decades hence schoolchildren on field trips will crowd at the foot of a bronze statue of Pier M. Forni, professor of Italian literature at Johns Hopkins University, who will be remembered as one of the greatest generals in our nation's struggle for civility.
Professor Forni is too humble to speak of himself this way, and since he fights primarily with words (and, on some occasions, cupcakes), he would hardly find a military analogy apt. But after publishing two books on civility, including the bestselling Choosing Civility: The Twenty-five Rules of Considerate Conduct, and founding the Civility Initiative at Johns Hopkins, he has emerged as a leader among the forces of polite resistance.
At our first meeting, I tried to be on my best behavior but broke two of his rules before our interview even began. First, I was late, and second, I declined his offer of a glass of Prosecco. He explained that he keeps a bottle handy to offer visitors "comfort in a few bubbles." The sparkling wine comes from Veneto, the region of Italy where Forni was born 57 years ago and whose tones have carried into his gently accented English.
Living outside one's native country almost inevitably makes manners and mores visible in a new way, and so it was for Forni when he came to study literature at UCLA in 1978. He says he will never forget the shock he felt when a Los Angeles nurse called him by his first name, something a polite stranger would never have done at that time in Italy. Still, Forni became used to American ways (he now urges his European friends not to confuse American informality with rudeness), and indeed he took more than two decades to reinvent himself as a secular prophet of good manners.
He says a "midlife crisis" induced that sudden change—however different, he notes, from the usual response of buying a red Ferrari. One day in the mid-1990s, Forni was discussing a Dante canto with a roomful of Hopkins undergraduates when he had an epiphany: even if he imparted everything there was to know about Dante, he realized, he would have failed as a teacher if his students were to go out and be rude to an old lady on the bus. In 1997, he began what was then called the Johns Hopkins Civility Project, a cluster of research and outreach programs that have studied the effects of manners and their lack in sites as diverse as schools, hospitals and a maximum security prison. In 2002, he published Choosing Civility.
The book extended Forni's epiphany at least a hundred thousandfold, to judge from the number of copies sold, and launched him into the role of commentator on matters of civility. It also cast him into a decidedly more private role: that of an ad hoc counselor for the many of his readers who share with him their personal problems. Would it be rude to give a copy of Choosing Civility to my spouse? they ask. Is there a civil way to prevent my 15-year-old from spending unsupervised time in the house with her 20-year-old boyfriend? How can I get my young employees to fall into line?
The book begins with an epigraph from Henry James: "Three things in human life are important: The first is to be kind. The second is to be kind. And the third is to be kind." Forni's work—the hundreds of pages published, the numerous college courses taught, the dozens of speeches given—is only a series of variations on that simple theme. The professor doesn't claim to be saying anything new, only presenting truths in need of rediscovery. "I see my work as pulling brambles apart from the entrance to the old forgotten mine that still has an ore of silver," he says.



Comments
I have just discovered, with admiration Prof. Forni's books on "Civility". So often I am discouraged by the inability of many Americans to hold open the door for courtesy to the next approaching entrant. I am so discouraged by the habit of grunting without the ability to enunciate "thank you". Even these trivial basics contribute to a gentler atmosphere if implemented. Civility is fundamental to a civil society; without it we exist in an uncivilized unleashed society.
Posted by frances shaffi on November 29,2008 | 07:19PM
Thank goodness someone else has recognized that there is hardly any kindness or civility anymore. I've talked often to my family and friends of instances where I've come home from some errand and I have a story about how rude someone was in the store or in the parking lot. I've been especially upset with employees in the stores, where you're spending your hard earned money, and they act as if YOU are the one who's rude by asking a question or for help! I said years ago that anyone under 35 is ignorant of the words "please", "thank you", or "excuse me". Do you think we could bring this trend back? Thank you for listening to my rant.
Posted by Christy on December 3,2008 | 01:26PM
Lord, if I didn't at least intellectually know it (I haven't quite mastered acceptance yet), that I cannot control anyone else's behavior, the uncouth conduct of 98% of my fellow tenants in this HUD-subsidized high-rise would have me beside myself and screaming in frustration! I must admit I only started noticing ill manners so acutely about the time I moved in here, but I do see it elsewhere. I hear tenants yelling in the non-sound-proofed hallway, slamming doors, trying to jam onto the elevators before allowing others off....I've ridden busses where cell-phone users talked non-stop from my boarding till I disembarked 45 minutes later....years ago, I often felt slighted when a friend who had call-waiting would put me on hold to answer her other line...even table-manners (now that we eat and drink constantly and on the move) have declined: people chew food without closing their lips, I once had a TennCare driver who popped, smacked and slurped her gum open-mouthed the whole time--she didn't even care what her passengers preferred to listen to on the vehicle's radio; we were subjected to her cacophanous (to me) choice in "music" OK, it's bad manners for anyone to keep griping as I have, but I'd like to at least try to help civilize my fellow tenants if anyone can give me any ideas.
Posted by Cheryl M. Dare on December 3,2008 | 02:55PM
This should be required as of kindergarten if parents are unable to teach their children at the earliest age. It makes life so simple and so much more pleasant. Civility, ethics and simplicity are the measure of real elegance, in addition to self respect and respect for others. We live by example by family and our peers. Thank you for reminding us of a better way to live and behave, good luck, I hope many people will follow your advice and be better for it. Sincerely, Michele Sheid
Posted by michele Sheid on December 4,2008 | 12:54AM
There is a preponderance of incivility today, but respect, compassion, tolerance and tact are antidotes to aggression, hostility and violence.
Posted by Barry Jacobs on December 4,2008 | 05:43AM
Several years ago I asked a lovely hostess from England this question," Why do most people from other countries, especially Europe it seems, dislike Americans? She answered,"Americans are so rude and demanding in our country when they travel." I thought over her response and said quietly to her, and, quite sadly really," We do not have to leave our country to be rude to people as we do that here to our own people." Sandy Boletchek, Washington Metro Area...
Posted by Sandy Boletchek on December 4,2008 | 01:58PM
Dr. Forni, Bravo! Many thanks! Gloria Cinquino
Posted by Gloria Cinquino on December 4,2008 | 02:42PM
It is sad that the US Congress has set such an abysmal standard for civility.
Posted by Barry Belanger on December 7,2008 | 04:23AM
I remember my mom telling me that as soon as my siblings and I could talk, she taught us to say "Please" and "Thank you". It became second nature. As a teen I got out the habit because I thought I was being rebellious and that my don't-give-a-flip attitude was cool. When I entered the world of customer service work, I learned that customers were more cooperative if you were kind and polite. I am now trying to teach my 3-year-old daughter "Please" and "Thank you". I'm always asking her "What do you say?" I know some people might feel that my child doesn't fully understand the concept of civility and she might not. But I do know that her demanding tone changes to pleasant when I remind her to say the magic words. When people say that the rules "merely add a veneer of civility where what is needed is deep and genuine compassion", I say so? It's much easier to have folks follow rules than it to make them genuinely care.
Posted by Kim on January 5,2009 | 12:44PM
The rudness that has over taken my beloved country has saddened me. When I was growing up politeness was a given part of our training as civilized people. I brought my children up to respect people and they are doing the same with their families. It dosen't hurt to say please, thank you and excuse me. Life would be more pleasent if we went back to treating people as we would like to be treated instead of being rude and abrupt. It is so good to know there are many others that feel the lack of civility in our culture.
Posted by Claire on January 11,2009 | 01:40PM
Just a small habit (rule) can go a far way in the act of civility in children (and adults). I have the 'rule' (I'd like to better refer to it as a 'lesson') in my 6-9 yr. old Montessori classroom that we never use the words 'boring' or 'stupid' , as both words give off a negative and unkind connotation. (We call them the 'b' and 's' words.) This habit (of not using the word) has been followed faithfully for more than 10 years, and I seldom have to 'give that lesson' nowadays. It truly teaches the children to be respectful, especially in the words they use to communicate with each other, and rises the bar of 'etiquette'! Needless to say, the whole school tries to follow the lesson.
Posted by Anne (Alexander-Ozinskas) on August 20,2009 | 03:19PM
Our society has a multitude of people who think not being rude is talking in softer voice as they tell you in so many words to "go to hell". Today many people seem to even have special training in how to be passively aggressive without appearing to be rude. I think they are a much worse for me than for instance an ex-marine who uses a loud voice to warn you not to bump into him again while walking on a crowded street. The marine knows when he is being...."loud and clear" and is expecting you to respond accordingly.
Posted by Glen Bu on August 20,2009 | 05:38PM
This country has turned the teaching of competition and winning as the only avenue to being the best. Best of what, self - ego-stroking, looking after "number one" only & first. This is the key to being un-civilized. Being Civil in thought and actions means looking out for those for whom you touch with your attitude, your actions and communications as a sense of being "a part of something greater than self". At age 50 I finished a degree in Sociology and went on to Mediation Training to possibly offer myself to mediate family issues associated with separated families. It never came to fruition as I ended up collecting Court Ordered Child Support to be sure children had support from the absent parent. Now I am retiring......maybe I can step up as Dr. Forni has done. How very much I wish and truly pray daily for peaceful lives here and peaceful civility in every life on this planet especially the children who can make the future more civil.
Posted by Sherry Kleinschmidt on August 20,2009 | 09:08PM
Professor Forni's concept of civility overlaps with the concept of social intelligence. Keep in mind that people tend to act in a similiar fashion as those around them. For instance, when I went to a posh restaurant, I dressed up and minded my table manners more. When I worked in a warehouse, I chose to dress down & forego some manners. Neither instance implied that my concept of manners had changed but I adapted those manners to be more like my peers so that I could interact with them in the least conflictive way possible. In both cases, I was civil and this civility enabled me to interact even better with my peers. Civility, as a tenet of social intelligence, has its own rewards...being civil towards your peers translates into greater civility on their part towards you.
Posted by Sharon Lina Pearce on August 21,2009 | 04:08AM
I have found through out my dealings with others that they are just as civil towards you as you are to them (i.e. a viriation of the Golden Rule - Be civil to others and they will be civil to you)
Posted by Frederick M. Knox on August 21,2009 | 08:24PM
I can remember when news media and live reporters, book reviewers and even movie reviewers used a person's title with their name, such as "Mrs. Dandy Stribling", instead of addressing them or citing them using just their last name, as in "Stribling". This grates on _my_ understanding of civility, though it's around me everywhere I turn. It's simply another step down to "accepted" incivility and personal disrespect.
Posted by Dayonda Stribling on August 24,2009 | 08:53PM