Summary
Despite being written decades ago, remains a cornerstone text for serious students of human behavior. While modern neuroscience has refined some of his claims (specifically regarding the localization of emotion in the brain), his observational rigor is unmatched.
His premise was revolutionary for its time: The face is not just a canvas for emotion but a map of one's character. He argued that habitual emotional states—fear, aggression, humor, suspicion—physically sculpt the face over time. His seminal work, Face Language , published in the 1970s, became a handbook for anyone who wanted to "read" people at a glance.
: Below is a detailed summary, analysis, and breakdown of the book's core concepts, so you can understand Whiteside's system without violating copyright.
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