Faces of the People
Richard Altick, 19 August 1982
Physiognomy in the European Novel: Faces and Fortunes
by Graeme Tytler.
Princeton, 436 pp., £19.10, March 1982,0 691 06491 1 Show More
by Graeme Tytler.
Princeton, 436 pp., £19.10, March 1982,
A Human Comedy: Physiognomy and Caricature in 19th-century Paris
by Judith Wechsler.
Thames and Hudson, 208 pp., £18.50, June 1982,0 500 01268 7 Show More
by Judith Wechsler.
Thames and Hudson, 208 pp., £18.50, June 1982,
“... There’s no art to find the mind’s construction in the face,’ said King Duncan in the fourth scene of Macbeth. But there was, and Shakespeare knew this. Almost at the moment he was writing the play, a new law required that anybody who professed ‘a knowledge of phisnognomie’ – one version of the name by which the practice of reading character in facial features was known to the learned – was to be ‘openly whipped untill his body be bloudye ... ”