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Rudeness - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Rudeness
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Rude" redirects here. For other uses, see
Rude (disambiguation).
Rudeness (also called impudence or effrontery) is a display of disrespectfulness by not complying with the social "laws" or
etiquette of a group or culture. These laws have been established as the essential boundaries of normally accepted behavior. To be unable or unwilling to align one's behavior with these laws known to the general population of what is socially acceptable is to be rude.
Rudeness "constituted by deviation from whatever counts as politic in a given social context, is inherently confrontational and disruptive to social equilibrium" (Kasper, 1990, p. 208). Rudeness, particularly with respect to speech, is necessarily confrontational at its core.
Similar terms include:
impoliteness, making a
faux pas, insensitivity, offensiveness,
obscenity,
profanity, violating
taboos, and
deviancy. In some cases,
criminal behavior can also be an act of rudeness.
Contents
Relationship to morality
Both
manners and
morality deal with whether a thing is morally good or bad, but at different levels. Unlike morality, which, for example, condemns murder as a violation of the human person, manners primarily concerns itself with violations of human dignity, rather than the person's health or property (Martin, 1996, p. 123). Rude behavior is a violation of human dignity or of the respect due to others.
Cultural differences
Main article:
Intercultural competence
The specific actions that are considered polite or rude vary dramatically by place, time, and context. Differences in
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