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Survival of the Prettiest: The Science of Beauty
 
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Survival of the Prettiest: The Science of Beauty (Paperback)

by Nancy Etcoff (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 344 pages
  • Publisher: Abacus; New edition edition (18 May 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0349110840
  • ISBN-13: 978-0349110844
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 12 x 2.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 707,250 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Nancy Etcoff's synthesis of up-to-the-minute evolutionary biology, neuroscience, social science and literary criticism is the very model of good popular science. So why is her account of physical beauty so damned titillating? There is nothing salacious here: Etcoff simply describes where beauty comes from, what it is for, how it is exploited and controlled today, and who stands to gain and lose from its presence in the world. There is much here that is shocking, but such shocks and surprises are intellectual, rather than erotic. "In Brazil there are more Avon ladies than members of the army," Etcoff observes. "In the United States more money is spent on beauty than on education or social services ... and in 1715 riots broke out in France when the use of flour on the hair of aristocrats led to a food shortage."

Why is reading Survival of the Prettiest such an illicit pleasure? Perhaps because, in a society informed by Christian ethics and, more recently by feminism, we feel uneasy with the manifest injustice of physical beauty and the way it runs roughshod over modern notions of virtue, democracy and the dignity of the individual. It's like the joke about the mother-in-law--as irresistibly funny as it is politically unacceptable. Why, then, should we take beauty seriously? Because, Etcoff argues, beauty exists. It is not, like mother-in-law jokes, a product of the social fabric. It is information, there to aid procreation and species survival. We may disapprove of the ways we are manipulated at so visceral a level by so primitive a mechanism. But to deny beauty its social and political force is an act worthy of Canute. "How to live with beauty and bring it back into the realm of pleasure is a task for 21st century civilisation," Etcoff writes, and, thanks to her, we are off to a good start. --Simon Ings



Matt Ridley, author of GENOME

'Erudite, pithy, witty and indeed beautiful, Nancy Etcoff's prose brings sense at last to the study of beauty'

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Beauty Trap?, 29 Mar 2002
By A Customer
Nancy Etcoff is not a philosopher, for her sins. She is a shrink - a head examiner, a 'clinical psychologist' even, as the author notes puts it at the back of this book. But having said that, this is philosophy, and it is a tribute to the sort of scholarly but original and even occasionally profound writing that (occasionally) comes out of American universities these days.

Etcoff's approach then is that of a 'scientist' rather than of a philosopher, and in a fast paced and expert survey of recent research she argues persuasively the following that 'beauty' is more than in the eye of the beholder - it is a cross-cultural reality. Etcoff illustrates this with a number of studies showing how people from different races and cultures nonetheless will rank other people unerringly in order of attractiveness.

The reason people do this, Etcoff says, is that they have been programmed by millennia of evolution to identify the most 'fertile' partner. Men look for women who have the 'hour glass' shape because this maximises the chance of the woman being old enough to bear children, but young enough not to be either pregnant already or breast-feeding (in which case she is not fertile.) Women, equally, look for square jawed, tall dark and handsome men, who thereby illustrate not only their masculinity but their ability to help bring up children.

And there we have perhaps one of the first objections to Etcoff's book. It is full of supposedly incontrovertible 'scientific' statements, mixed up with really rather weak pieces of common-sense which are little more than the currency of turn of then century Harvard University.

Etcoff does not actually say 'the most beautiful of all women are blonde americans' but she comes pretty close to it. She certainly does say 'gentlemen prefer blondes', and she does say men are programmed to prefer paler skin to darker skin. She says men do not like 'hairy' women, and without going into details here (!) she is again pointing at the 'Playboy' blonde and away from the classical brunette let alone the African, Asian or South American racial types. Similarly, she insists that the lithe, muscular body is a natural preference - in the face of the evidence she herself cites (think of all those awful Renaissance 'picnics in arcadia' scenes!) that for most places and most periods, women who are plump and evidently more leisured, have been considered the more lovely to behold.

But perhaps the main objection must be that being attractive is not the same thing a s being beautiful - there is a degree of cross-over obviously, but to treat the two terms as interchangeable , as Etcoff does here, is unscientific not to say unphilosophical. Her main point, it turns out, is little more than a sleight-of-hand - she exchanges 'beauty' for 'attractive' and then substitutes for this 'most fertile looking'.

Other writers have taken a quite different slant. Naomi Wolf attributes all sorts of malign effects to notions of beauty (anorexia, anxiety, stress, low self-esteem, sexual harassment, incest and rape) - and none of the good ones. Wolf, describes in 'The Beauty Myth' how historically several types of beauty have been esteemed, and how "the qualities that a given period calls beautiful in a woman are merely symbols of the female behaviour that that period considers desirable". The reason women wear make-up and are constantly dieting is that they have been taken in by a kind of cult religion - the cult being that of the body beautiful. And men are also victims, not only in their recent search for the "elusive six pack", but in that they are unable to relate to women as they really are.

Etcoff accepts all that, and much of the book is a valuable account of social scientific evidence of just this sort of 'discrimination'. But is there something underlying beauty that is timeless, that is fundamental? Of course, like the form of beauty' described by the female philosopher, Diotima, to Socrates in Plato's Symposium, it will not be peculiar to the human female, but a quality to be found in males and indeed all of nature too.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hugely interesting and strives to be fair., 23 Nov 2000
By A Customer
I read this book straight after reading Naomi Wolf's The Beauty Myth. Whilst The Beauty Myth sees beauty as a myth constructed by the fashion industry to keep us consuming, this book sees it as a natural biological instinct. The truth for me is somewhere in between. Very enlightening about why we are all attracted to the same types. It can be a bit depressing if you don't fit the perfect stereotype but it's also strangely liberating. Not at all anti-feminist as it may seem.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book, great fun, 2 Jan 2007
As a guy, I think the author focus a lot on the "we, the poor women" theme sometimes, but as a whole the book is a "must read". Every single HR manager, boss, teacher and potential employer should read it as a tool to avoid the awful discrimination we use (and are not aware of) when hiring, assessing, judging and promoting people. It was an eye opening experience for me.
The book is extremely well researched (50 pages on citations only) and very convincing. The language is easy and friendly.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars A good read but some of the theories sound a bit dodgy
This is a really enlightening read that explores the reasons why women are more obsessed with their looks than feminists like to believe. Read more
Published on 30 May 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars A pleasure to read
At last a book by a woman who isn't enslaved to feminism! This book is obviously closer to the mark than 'The Beauty Myth' by Naomi Wolf. Read more
Published on 18 May 2001

4.0 out of 5 stars refreshing and stimulatingly free of political correctness
Etcoff's book describes the way "prettiness" is seen from (mostly) the western viewpoint, but it also backs up the statements with how people developed their views of... Read more
Published on 2 Nov 2000 by LGW Bailey

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