Oxford Handbook of the Psychology of AppearanceWe live in a society in which messages associating physical attractiveness with success and happiness are pervasive. There is an epidemic of appearance concerns amongst teenagers and adults in westernised countries and body image dissatisfaction is now considered normative. Large numbers of people experience negative impacts on wellbeing and, for many adolescents, adults, and even children, appearance concerns are influential in choices about a range of health behaviours. The challenges facing them include difficulties with social encounters and the problem of having to cope with negative self perceptions. The Oxford Handbook of the Psychology of Appearance is a comprehensive reference text written by experts in the field. It examines how people feel about the way they look, and why it is that some people are happy with their appearance whilst increasing numbers are troubled by the way they look - reporting that these appearance-related concerns affect many aspects of their lives including relationships, health and well-being. It considers the influence of other people and how the media affects thoughts and behaviours related to appearance. It explores the experiences of people living with a disfigurement in a society that seems to be increasingly focussed on appearance and the pursuit of an idealised image of beauty, size and weight. Exploring a topic that has been often neglected in the psychological literature, this book will be invaluable for health, clinical, and social psychologists, health professionals working with patients with visible differences, and those in the field of public health and education. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 83
Page xii
... Emma Halliwell Therapeutic Interventions: Evidence of Effectiveness Elizabeth Jenkinson Computer-Based Psychosocial Interventions Alyson Bessell 414 439 449 455 468 486 502 517 531 551 568 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 xii contents.
... Emma Halliwell Therapeutic Interventions: Evidence of Effectiveness Elizabeth Jenkinson Computer-Based Psychosocial Interventions Alyson Bessell 414 439 449 455 468 486 502 517 531 551 568 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 xii contents.
Page 24
... evidence that newborns have a sense of body and consequently of self. The body immerses us in the world and affords agency, thus conferring a sense of both capabilities and limitations. The boundaries and capabilities of the body allow ...
... evidence that newborns have a sense of body and consequently of self. The body immerses us in the world and affords agency, thus conferring a sense of both capabilities and limitations. The boundaries and capabilities of the body allow ...
Page 41
... evidence that different cultures had different standards for judging the body—black judges indicating greater attraction to heavier figures than white judges including higher ideal weight and larger buttocks. There is further evidence ...
... evidence that different cultures had different standards for judging the body—black judges indicating greater attraction to heavier figures than white judges including higher ideal weight and larger buttocks. There is further evidence ...
Page 45
... evidence that average women's torsos are most attractive. Behavioral Ecology, 20, 716–21. Dumas, A., Laberge, S., & Straka, S. M., (2005). Older women's relations to bodily appearance: the embodiment of social and biological conditions ...
... evidence that average women's torsos are most attractive. Behavioral Ecology, 20, 716–21. Dumas, A., Laberge, S., & Straka, S. M., (2005). Older women's relations to bodily appearance: the embodiment of social and biological conditions ...
Page 51
... evidence to support these beliefs, the messages that patients and also GPs absorb from the media are: 1 You can resolve appearance concerns with (only) surgery; 2 Surgery is easy (e.g. the 'lunch time boob job'); and 3 Surgery not only ...
... evidence to support these beliefs, the messages that patients and also GPs absorb from the media are: 1 You can resolve appearance concerns with (only) surgery; 2 Surgery is easy (e.g. the 'lunch time boob job'); and 3 Surgery not only ...
Contents
1 | |
5 | |
SECTION 2 WHO IS AFFECTED BY APPEARANCE CONCERNS IN WHAT WAY AND WHY? | 115 |
SECTION 3 WHAT NEEDS TO CHANGE | 447 |
SECTION 4 RESEARCH ISSUES | 601 |
SECTION 5 WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE? | 677 |
Author index | 693 |
Subject index | 697 |
Other editions - View all
The Oxford Handbook of the Psychology of Appearance Nichola Rumsey,Diana Harcourt Limited preview - 2014 |
Common terms and phrases
adjustment adolescents adults anxiety appearance concerns appearance research appearance-related associated behaviours body dissatisfaction body dysmorphic disorder body image body satisfaction breast augmentation breast implants burn injury cancer challenges chapter cleft lip Clinical Psychology cognitive coping cosmetic surgery cultural dieting disfigurement disordered eating distress eating disorders effects evaluation evidence example exercise experience exposure face facial factors female focus gender girls Grogan Health Psychology healthcare highlighted ideals impact important increased individuals influence International Journal interventions involvement issues Journal of Eating lesbian levels male mastectomy men’s models muscular negative obesity outcomes parents participants patients peer people’s person physical appearance Plastic Surgery potential programmes psoriasis psychological psychosocial relationship reported rhinoplasty Ricciardelli risk role Rumsey Sarwer self-esteem sexual skin Smolak social comparisons sociocultural Stice suggests surgical therapy thin Thompson Tiggemann tion treatment visible difference vitiligo weight women young