MissRibena
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Purple said:When you look at how much our behaviour has in common with other higher mammals it seems absurd to me to ignore the genetic and therefore subconscious and instinctive link.
I was also suggesting that since we have no real idea what was regarded as the ideal by the masses hundreds of years ago, as the historical record is confined to one very narrow group, it is not a good idea to construct a sociological argument around the images that we do have.
I wasn't talking about portraits; I was talking about the practice of paying an artist to put your wives, daughters of mothers face on the Virgin Mary or whomever in their latest Church commissioned painting.
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OhPinchy said:Beyonce is 'fuller-bodied' .....I don't know many guys who would have the likes of Vanessa Feltz
OhPinchy said:Fellow women can answer 'well I think you are pretty' but only men and lesbians would be in a position to say 'I find you attractive (i.e. you physically turn me on)'
OhPinchy said:If you reverse the roles above so that it is a man asking 'am I attractive' I think the same rule applies - the answers given by women and gay men would be more relevant than those given by straight men.
OhPinchy said:The 'where did our perception of beauty come from?' stuff is all very interesting but has very little to do with the rest of the thread IMO.
QUOTE]
In fairness, purple did request that the threads be split earlier on.
But as it happens, I do think that the origin and perception of beauty and how it changes over time is closely related to the rest of the thread, because I am convinced that men like what their culture tells them to like far more than following the genes/instincts. The same culture informs women so that is why I agree with casiopea's last point that women are equally qualified to comment on women's beauty or attractiveness as men.
I think the reason men are uncomfortable with commenting on other men's beauty is down to the cultural taboo surrounding homosexuality and the residual homophobic tendancies that many straight men display to a lesser or greater extent.
Without being tangential again ... In Classical Greece, it was all about male beauty. Nobody was particularly concerned with what women looked like; they were basically seen as procreation slaves. The men were far more concerned with the body beautiful and preened to please and impress each other rather than women.
Rebecca
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