The occipital flattening of the head among the Polynesians seems due to the fact that this form of head was common and artificial means were used to accentuate the type.[2]
The Tahitians, among whom "long-nose" is considered as a word of insult, for the sake of beauty compress the forehead and the nose of the children.[3]
A Hottentot father, suspecting that a child born with a prominent nose had been
begotten by an European, would not allow it the honor … of a flat nose; but ordered it to be brought up with the bridge of its nose in its natural situation, to denote its mother's infamy.[4]
It is interesting to note also that, according to measurements by Schertzer and Schwarz, the feet of Chinese women in the unbound state seem distinguished by their smallness and this not only as compared with other nations, but also in comparison with the feet of Chinese men.[5]
Some peoples, as the Chinese and Japanese, are distinguished by the peculiarity of the aperture of the eye, the outer angle of which has an oblique, upward direction. This character is by the artists of these peoples exaggerated for the purpose, as it seems, of exhibiting its beauty as contrasted with the red-haired barbarians.[6]
We are prepared to find also that the preference for the prevailing type extends to the general type of female figure. Where this is naturally slender, the "cypress-slender" type is most
- ↑ Humboldt, Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain, translated by Black, Vol. I, p. 154, note.
- ↑ See Waitz-Gerland, op. cit., Vol. VI, p. 27.
- ↑ Waitz, op. cit., Vol. I, p. 305.
- ↑ Kolben, Present State of the Cape of Good Hope, Vol. I, p. 310.
- ↑ Welcker, "Die Füsse der Chinesinnen," Archiv für Anthropologie, Vol. V, p. 149.
- ↑ C. Vogt, Lectures on Man, English translation, p. 129.