Life, 1890-06-19 · page 9 of 14
Life — June 19, 1890 — page 9: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Political Cartoon Analysis This is a satirical illustration titled "Learning to Do Battle with the Wicked World." The image depicts a woman on horseback being trained or instructed by figures representing worldly temptations and vices. The banner or sign she carries appears to reference "conflicts" or "battles" (text partially visible). The cartoon uses allegorical imagery—the woman as an innocent figure, the demonic or monstrous creatures as embodiments of sin or corruption—to satirize the challenges young women face navigating society. The "wicked world" references appear to be vices or moral dangers. The artist's signature reads "Udo Keppler" (or similar). This reflects early 20th-century Life magazine's frequent moralizing satire about gender roles, education, and social virtue.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
comicbooks.com OF LEARNING TO DO BATTLE WITH THE WICKED WORLD