ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1986, this book grew out of a symposium held in 1981 at the University of Toronto on physical appearance as a determinant of personality and social behavior. There is little doubt that one’s appearance has some impact on the way one is perceived and treated; and presumably, owing to the socially reflected nature of the self, one’s personality likewise will be affected by one’s appearance. The questions arising from these basic observations and assumptions are many, and the expert contributors were invited to discuss their research on some of the implications of individual differences in appearance as they ramify into personality and social interaction. The chapters in this volume are the outcome of those discussions and cover the areas of facial attractiveness; physique; impact on social behavior, and deviance. Still a topic of interest to this day, this book can now be read and enjoyed in its historical context.

part I|58 pages

Facial Attractiveness

chapter 1|16 pages

Stereotyping based on Physical Attractiveness

Issues and Conceptual Perspectives

chapter 2|30 pages

From the Eye of the Beholder to Behavioral Reality

Development of Social Behaviors and Social Relations as a Function of Physical Attractiveness

part III|78 pages

Impact on Social Behavior

part IV|70 pages

Deviance

chapter 9|24 pages

Maturation and Social Behavior

A Framework for the Analysis of Deviance

part V|10 pages

Commentary