Judge, 1921-09-17 · page 4 of 36
Judge — September 17, 1921 — page 4: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis This illustration from *Judge* magazine depicts a scene at what appears to be a seaside resort or hotel entrance. A well-dressed man in glasses and formal attire speaks to a fashionably dressed woman wearing a cloche hat and light coat—typical 1920s styling. The dialogue reveals a social commentary: the man expresses surprise at seeing the woman frequently ("I wonder how I can see more of you"), and she responds that she and her mother visit every summer. The satire appears to target **social mobility and seasonal leisure patterns** among the wealthy during the Jazz Age—specifically, the predictability of the upper classes' summer vacation habits. The drawing is credited to Enid H. Detzler. Without additional context about specific current events, the precise satirical target remains somewhat unclear, though it likely mocks conventional courtship rituals or social pretension.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Drawn by Eona H. Derrzter. He—Anp I WONDER HOW I CAN SEE MORE OF YOU, MISS ANNA BELLE? She—Wuy, MOTHER AND I ALWAYS COME UP HERE EVERY SUMMER. 4