Judge, 1937-10 · page 9 of 36
Judge — October 1937 — page 9: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Cartoon Analysis: "But, Mother, I look so disgustingly pure" This October 1937 cartoon satirizes excessive prudishness or artificial morality. A young woman in an elegant gown addresses her mother while surrounded by what appears to be military or formally-dressed figures. The caption's ironic tone—claiming to look "disgustingly pure"—suggests the cartoon mocks exaggerated displays of virtue or propriety, particularly among the wealthy or socially prominent. The specific historical context remains unclear without additional information, though the formal military dress and the emphasis on artificial purity suggest possible commentary on pre-war social pretension or hypocrisy. The satirical point appears to be that outward appearances of virtue can be deliberately manufactured and unconvincing, a common Judge magazine theme targeting upper-class affectation.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
g, s 4 & => ~ ES 3 x = BS ° a rey S$ S os ~ “But, Mother, October 1937 comicbooks.com