Judge, 1925-06-13 · page 1 of 36
Judge — June 13, 1925 — page 1: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Judge Magazine Cover, June 13, 1925 This cover illustration titled "Hell's Belles" depicts a symmetrical figure with two female heads and bodies emerging from a single lower torso, wearing 1920s clothing and sporting bobbed hair and headpieces typical of the era. The imagery satirizes the "flapper" phenomenon—the modern, liberated young women of the Jazz Age who scandalized conservative society with bobbed hair, shortened skirts, and independent behavior. The doubled imagery and demonic title ("Hell's Belles") suggest moral panic about these women, portraying them as duplicitous or inherently corrupting. The satire reflects broader anxieties about changing gender roles and women's newfound social freedoms following women's suffrage (1920). The grotesque presentation expresses conservative disapproval of the era's social transformation.