Judge, 1922-02-25 · page 3 of 36
Judge — February 25, 1922 — page 3: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# "Fair Enough" — Judge Magazine, February 25, 1922 This illustration by Baskerville depicts a fashionable woman seated, holding what appears to be a magazine or publication while reviewing it critically. The title "Fair Enough" suggests the cartoon comments on women's judgmental attitudes or standards—likely toward media, literature, or social matters. The woman's composed, evaluative posture and the elegant 1920s styling (bobbed hair, modern dress) reflect the era's "New Woman"—increasingly educated and opinionated. The satire appears to critique either women's growing critical voice in public discourse or, conversely, to celebrate their newfound ability to judge cultural products as equals. Without additional context from the magazine's text, the precise target remains somewhat unclear, though it clearly engages with evolving gender roles of the Jazz Age.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
551922 ©Ocisszetca CO FEB VotuME 82, NuMBER 2104 Fesrvary 25, 1922 / BASERVILLE__ MARIE FAIR ENOUGH Drawn by BASKERVILLE