Abstract

The hijab is central to the lives of Muslim women across the world but little is known about the actual effects exerted by this garment on perceptions of the wearer. Indeed, while previous research has suggested that wearing the hijab may affect the physical attractiveness of women, the actual effect of wearing the hijab on perceptions of female facial attractiveness by Muslim men in a Muslim country is largely unknown. Accordingly, this study investigated the effects of the hijab on female facial attractiveness perceived by practising Muslim men living in their native Muslim country (the United Arab Emirates). Participants were presented with frontal-head images of women shown in three conditions: in the fully covered condition, heads were completely covered by the hijab except for the face; in the partially covered condition, heads were completely covered by the hijab except for the face and areas around the forehead and each side of the face and head; in the uncovered condition, heads had no covering at all. The findings revealed that faces where heads were uncovered or partially covered were rated as equally attractive, and both were rated as substantially more attractive than faces where heads were fully covered. Thus, while wearing the hijab can suppress female facial attractiveness to men, these findings suggest that not all hijab wearing has this effect, and female facial attractiveness for practising Muslim men living in their native Muslim country may not be reduced simply by wearing this garment. Indeed, from the findings we report, slight changes to the positioning of the hijab (the partially covered condition) produce perceptions of facial attractiveness that are no lower than when no hijab is worn, and this may have important implications for wearing the hijab in Muslim societies. Finally, we argue that the pattern of effects we observed is not explained by anti-Islamic feeling or cultural endogamy, and that a major contributory factor is that being fully covered by the hijab occludes external features, especially the hair and lateral parts of the head and face, which, when normally visible, provide a substantial perceptual contribution to human facial attractiveness.

Highlights

  • The hijab is a traditional head covering worn by Muslim women across the world as a symbol of modesty, piety, and cultural identity

  • Of particular importance is that the participants providing these perceptions were all practicing Muslim men living in their native Muslim country where Islam and the hijab are normal and universally accepted aspects of everyday life

  • Perceptions by Muslim men of facial attractiveness in women wearing the hijab were unlikely to be affected by anti-Islamic feelings, avoiding negative influences that may have affected previous research on male perceptions of female facial attractiveness carried out in a non-Muslim country

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Summary

Introduction

The hijab is a traditional head covering worn by Muslim women across the world as a symbol of modesty, piety, and cultural identity. The way in which the hijab is worn can vary (e.g., tightly around the face or more loosely; Fig 1A and 1B), millions of Muslim women, and especially those native to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), choose to wear this head covering when in public (e.g., [1,2,3,4]). The use of religious veiling to reduce female attractiveness may have a clear intentional function, the actual effectiveness of the hijab in influencing how men perceive the attractiveness of the female wearer remains to be fully understood

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