Judge, 1929-04-20 · page 12 of 36
Judge — April 20, 1929 — page 12: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Judge Magazine Cartoon Analysis This satirical illustration by Harry Grant Dart mocks Einstein's theory of relativity. The cartoon depicts futuristic space travelers in rocket ships encountering paradoxical situations—one discovers "tomorrow was yesterday," the other started for Mars and "met myself coming back." The humor targets public confusion and skepticism about Einstein's then-revolutionary concepts of time relativity and spacetime. The title "According to Mr. Einstein" frames these absurd scenarios as logical consequences of his theories. By showing time-travel impossibilities presented matter-of-factly, the cartoonist suggests Einstein's ideas are so counterintuitive they border on nonsense. This reflects early-twentieth-century popular bewilderment with relativity theory—many Americans found it incomprehensible and mocked it as pseudoscience. The cartoon ridicules both Einstein's theories and those who accept them uncritically.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
| JUDGE | ’ ACCORDING TO MR. EINS'TEIN ] | ' | | { i Hi Hii Harry GRANT Dery “T just found out that tomorrow was yesterday.” “That's nothing. I started for Mars and met myself coming back.” 10 comicbooks.com