The book is divided into three sections: The Perceiver, The Stigmatized, and The Social Interface, each with four or five chapters concerning distinct major subtopics, e.g., chapter 5, "Ideology and Lay Theories of Stigma: The Justification of Stigma," chapter 8, "The Hidden Costs of Stigma," and chapter 13, "Stigma and Self-Fulfilling Prophecies." The authors go far beyond delineating the ancient Greek practice of burning a mark or brand, i.e., a stigma, into a criminal or slave’s skin or the American Puritan use of the scarlet A. They deal with issues of stereotyping and prejudice experienced by individuals and groups of different sex, gender role, age, sexual orientation, religion, race, ethnicity, physical traits, and sociocultural background, which result in far-reaching social and psychological consequences and psychiatric symptoms and syndromes (e.g., posttraumatic stress disorder).