Mirror, Mirror: The Importance of Looks in Everyday Life

Front Cover
State University of New York Press, Dec 1, 1985 - Social Science - 468 pages
Mirror, Mirror... examines the hidden truth about good looks. Through extensive research of scholarly studies and popular culture, the authors provide a lively and comprehensive view of what behavioral scientists have learned about the effects of personal appearance. A wealth of illustrations and photographs give visual support to the evidence presented.

The book explores the view that people believe good-looking individuals possess almost all the virtues known to humankind; consequently, they treat the good-looking and ugly very differently. Mirror, Mirror reviews the stereotypes held about people with specific characteristics and it explains the impact of height, weight, and attributes such as hair color, eye color and facial hair on the course of social encounters. The authors show that through time these reaction patterns have their effect and that good-looking and unattractive persons come to be different types of people. To show the relative nature of concepts of beauty, the authors also present examples of what other cultures consider attractive.
 

Contents

MAD OR BAD?
69
ROMANTIC BEGINNINGS
105
Chapter 6
165
Chapter 7
227
Chapter 9
269
Chapter 10
296
Chapter 11
321
Bibliography
377
Index
433
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1985)

Elaine Hatfield, Professor of Psychology at the University of Hawaii, is the most frequently quoted social psychologist in the world. Susan Sprecher is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Illinois State University.

Bibliographic information