ABSTRACT

Radical Civility unearths civility’s extraordinary potential by addressing why the virtue has fallen into crisis, recalling the injunctions that transpose utopia upon the stingy politics of likelihood, and by offering a vision of citizens who find purpose in dignifying each other.

Jason Caro takes a three-pronged approach; first, identifying the effects of the misuse of civility, then expanding the meaning of civility, and finally offering applied examples of civility. Civility bears its participants to utopia. Such utopia has many forms: the politics of unlikelihood, the civil community, the ideal civility situation, or charmocracy. Unlike many studies of political manners, Caro embraces the relation between the virtue and politeness. Civility is then the effort to have politics charm. Caro draws out the full potential of the virtue by observing how such politeness is a particular mode of communicative action whereby participants are not merely exchanging face-saving gestures but constructing utopia.

This radical stance raises the stakes of the debate on civility by setting the book implacably against realism and its politics of likelihood. It will appeal to those in the social sciences, cultural studies, social psychology, philosophy, communication, and peace studies.

chapter 1|24 pages

Introduction

part |52 pages

Part I

chapter 262|25 pages

Warning Sign

chapter 3|25 pages

The Problem of Malpropriety

part |56 pages

Part II

chapter 784|26 pages

Civility and Justice

chapter 5|28 pages

Radical Civilities

part |55 pages

Part III

chapter 1346|26 pages

Democratic Manners

chapter 7|21 pages

Utopian Citizenship

chapter 8|6 pages

Conclusion