Thursday, October 17, 2024

A Black Cat Crosses Your Path: The Indelible Durability of Black Cat Superstitions Through Their Use in Horror Films

 



            The association of cats with the occult, Halloween and generally anything spooky, has been woven into our culture through centuries’ long entanglements of superstitions, folklore, and anti-cat rhetoric; coupled with the embrace and overall cultural primacy of dogs in many western civilizations. This specious speciesist behavior can be, in part, attributed to the differences in domestication between cats and dogs. Whereas dogs were domesticated first, simultaneously independent in other geographic regions and bred for a variety of purposes that were both practical for the survival of the human species and for social companionship (the dog is “man’s best friend”[1], after all), the domestication of cats, while similarly early and paralleled geographic independence and diversity, their use was far more practical, in the elimination of vermin. Unlike K-9 integration, cats have undergone little genetic or behavioral changes as they have been independently integrated across countries and continents. This independence and lack of evolutionary refinement led to the negative associations many cultures developed around felines, especially black cats. This paper is a brief exploration of those negative associations/superstitions from a sociological perspective, steeping the enmity of cats in the ubiquitous proliferation of the Christian religion and mechanisms of gendered oppression, to the point where these associations eventually get reproduced in our modern mythology of movies.


HISTORICAL CONTEXT  

            The practiced acrimony toward (black) cats is a byproduct of religious colonialism. Masculinely coded and just as fragile, the manifest destiny minded, pre-pubecently lecherous institution of Christianity sought to eradicate any belief that did not align with their patriarchically hegemonic monotheism; and black cats were caught in its undertow. Prior to this invasive transformation, cats were revered as symbols of the divine in a variety of non-Western cultures, including Egypt and Greece. Even European folklore had a more amenable association with cats prior to this invasion; seeing cats as being both spiritual and familial companions. Yet, as the influence of the church spread, it wrestled power from the people to loom their manufactured divinity over the people they were enslaving.

            In 1233, Pope Gregory declared that black cats were an incarnation of Satan. This sparked an inquisition into duplicitous demonology and established literal “witch hunts” that were designed to eradicate a Luciferian cult that had developed in the region (Wilde, 2017)[2]. That these practices pre-date both the decree and the Christian religion itself was of no matter, as the goal was a complete elimination or emulsification of these traditions; stripping what they need from them and gaining loyalty and obedience while amassing power though establishing authority.  This process can be understood through the Sociology of Religion

 

            The Sociology of Religion

The power of the oligarchic patriarchal Christianity and its demonization of black cats can be understood by looking at the Sociology of religion and the work of Emile Durkheim and Max Weber. Durkheim (2001) discusses the foundational principle of the sacred, a concept that predates the formation of institutionalized religion. The sacred is socially constructed through individual and group interactions surrounding a belief or object, and the restrictions that we place on how that object, belief or behavior can be expressed. Something becomes sacred through our own experiences, when other people tell us something is sacred, or when there are social restrictions and consequences around the mishandling of an object or behavior. Ironically, “sacredness” does not only include the divine, but also the diabolical. Therefore, even though black cats and the superstitions around their behavior consider them to be deplorable, they are still sacred.

The valuation of black cats as still being sacred hits at the core of the power of religion for Durkheim; the content of belief is less important than the function and control of that belief. Social organization determines how people are going to understand and accept religious belief. But this practice has more to do with social order and social control rather than anything spiritual. This is what Durkheim called “collective effervescence” where through emotional contagion and appeal to a higher authority, feelings of emotional security, comfort and solace get attributed to a higher power or an exalted entity when those feelings of elation, fear, hope and sadness are, instead, the product of basic group dynamics. This, on the surface, seems to promote spiritual plurality as it is the group, and not the belief that is the most important.  However, the culturally relativistic practice of spiritual plurality does not develop into the acquisition of and exercise of social power. For that, belief needs to be greatly regulated, creating a tighter grip on what is considered acceptable, and an elaborate policing of belief and behaviors that a group does not find to be legitimate. It requires bureaucratic institutionalization.

Max Weber (2002) understands the relationship between religious belief and social structures, in the way it uses belief as a resource and currency to allow that structure to replicate itself. The cultivation of that “collective effervescence” is done through legitimation in the form of the social structure that establishes the social order. Belief Systems (folktales and other indigenous stories) are born out of traditional levels of authority, which justifies its ascension to power through tribal leaderships supported by bloodline or birth order. Unfortunately, this still allows for plurality, thereby minimizing the power of the system’s ability to create collective effervescence. To control how people experience belief, and maximize the output of disassociation between the power of a belief and the recognition of group dynamics, belief systems have to be bureaucratized by being transformed into a religion.

  A religion is a belief system that has been routinized. There are fixed jurisdictions of authorities, the organizational chart is structured as a hierarchy, there is archival communication and correspondence, there is a level of impersonality and an obligatory drive for the reproduction of the religious structure itself (Weber 2019). This obligatory reproductive drive of religion is also comparable to the institutions of masculinity and capitalism of which they too share a bureaucratic organization and the fatal flaw of fragility requiring proliferation in lew of perishing. All three institutional mechanisms have rigid belief structures without acceptance of diversity difference or deference. Therefore, Capitalism must propagate itself through profit and monopolization, Masculinity through a toxic hegemonic expression of itself that every person has to accept, acquiesce, amplify or interrogate, and religion through monotheistic missionary work and conversion. Each has a drive and focus to cover the planet, because it is threatened by anything that isn’t itself or complementary to it. Thus, the vilification of black cats can find its origin in the eradication of nonwestern beliefs and cultures because they threaten the fragile supremacist organization of oligarchic Patriarchal Christianity. Since this proliferation of these uniform institutions continue today, many of these beliefs and practices are reproduced in our film and popular culture.

 


SOCIAL ANALYSIS

            Film and popular culture are forms of soft power within society. They influence public perception and reflect the values that we both live by and aspire to. They are a mirror and a wish fulfilment fantasy separately or often simultaneously. Since the historic valuation of dogs as the animal most coveted for human companionship, cats have been regulated to something other, less than. This is, at least in part because of the threat that cats pose to the religious social order throughout history, being associated with beliefs and practices that needed to be eradicated to strengthen the importance and claim of Oligarchic Patriarchal Christianity. Furthering this aim, is that one of the most consistent representations of cats, particularly black cats, is within the Horror genre. This is using the language of cinema as another tool to reinforce the erroneous claim that cats have a sacredly diabolical “nature”.  Granted it is unclear if these depictions have the same lofty purpose as the religious decrees of the past; or that the “spooky” nature of [black] cats has seeped into our culture for so long that it has poisoned our attitudes toward these feline familiars by being part of the horror zeitgeist. To interrogate this further, there is an interesting juxtaposition of two representations of black cats in horror films, one from within the hegemonically Christian United States of the 1940’s in Cat People  and the 1960’s Japanese Feminist Horror film Kuroneko.




            Black Cat Comparisons in Film: Cat People and Kuroneko

                The 1942 film Cat People is one of the first horror films by producer Val Lewen for RKO pictures. The film follows the budding romance between Serbian Immigrant Irena (Simone Simon) and her bespoken beau Oliver Reed (Kent Smith). As their courtship turns to marriage, Irena confides in Oliver that she is descendant of a group of witches, cursed to transform into violent cat-like beasts whenever they feel either love or passion; pursued to almost eradication by King John. The majority of the film’s economic runtime (of 77 minutes) is spent in denial or trying to cure Irena of this so-called delusion through Psychoanalysis, until the fears are realized, and the transformations begin.

             Cat People has a lot of socially relevant and seemingly progressive themes for the time (divorce, the struggles of immigration, the ease of white male privilege, the importance of mental health, the validity of working women and platonic cisgendered heterosexual friendships). Part of this progressiveness is due to it being a genre picture in Horror. Much like Noir of the 1930’s, more progressive ideas and attitudes were allowed because it was in a genre that was perceived as a fantasy, as outside the realm of reality.  Also, in typical Hollywood fashion of the time, the film ultimately forgoes these progressive themes, labeling them as dangerous (vilifying female sexuality) and/or in need of correcting. Then, doubles down on the reproduction of the “traditional family” through the construction of typical romantic traditions and the elimination of “the other”, in this case, the “immigrant other” of Irena. The image and representation of cats are used as an allegorical cautionary tale against these progressive ideas. The cat is the other, so “the other” is represented by a cat; thereby sealing their fate for their perceived transgressions. The wildness and violence that Irena displays as a shape shifted feline beast, speaks volumes about the fear of female sexuality as something that needs to be contained, controlled or destroyed. At the same time, this solidifies the feminization of cats and masculinization of dogs, that linguistically is still hard to shake. Colloquially, we often use the pronouns of she/her for cats and he/him for dogs regardless of the sex of the actual animal.[3]

This cautionary tale of female sexuality becomes even more crystalized when viewed through a queer lens. The struggle that Irena has with understanding a secret side of herself that she’s had since she was born, can be an easy stand in for the Queer communities coming out process. From this perspective, the stalking of Oliver’s co-worker, Alice, takes on a new dimension. Gone is the simplistically traditional reverberation of the scorned wife, in its place is a delectably juicy subversion of Irena trying to contain her animalistic lust for another woman. Unfortunately, the film still centers itself in the reproduction of the traditionally Christian ideas that results in an early example of the “bury your gays” trope.



Years later, Japanese filmmaker Kaneto Shindo reappropriated the perceived diabolical nature of [black] cats into a horror revenge fantasy with Kuroneko. The film is part of the kaibyo “Demon Cat/Ghost Cat subgenre of Japanese horror films that originated from Kabuki theater; but gained popularity prior to WWII and again in the 1960’s. Kuroneko is unique among its contemporaries as that the demon death dealt by the cat, has a vengefully noble purpose. In the film, a mother and her daughter-in-law are raped and murdered by a troop of Samurai before their house is burned down. After they are brought back by a demon cat as vengeful spirits, they seduce and murder Samurai that wander in the woods, tearing their throats out. This becomes such a problem that, in a twist of fateful irony, the mother/ daughter-in-law’s son/husband is sent to destroy them. With each unable to destroy the other, one of the ghosts becomes damned and the Samurai, realizing what he’s done, wastes away to nothing.    

The subversion of western tropes in Kuroneko is notable both in its storytelling and its depiction of cats. The Japanese onryo (feminine vengeful spirit) has become an easy allegory for feminist respite and revolution in modern and postmodern filmmaking[4]. The anger and desire for retribution is compellingly understood due to the ubiquity of misogynistic western Patriarchal rule that has become so conventional that it is actually a trope. Additionally, Japanese folklore does not see the cat as demonic, or the spawn of Satan as Pope Gregory did. Instead, cats in Japan can have an interesting duality. They can either be seen as benevolent creatures of good fortune (manekineko)[5] or they can be precocious shape shifting tricksters (bakeneko) which garner them a more malevolent moniker and reputation. In Kuroneko, the black cat spirit could be seen as balancing the scales towards justice; for the pain and rage felt by the two women deserves rectifying retribution.

Unfortunately, there is also a debilitating gender double standard that goes on within these narratives. As often happens within these stories, when men seek retributive violence for the death and loss of a loved one, their orgiastic orgasm of violence is a tempestuous tapestry of glorifyingly gory images to the point that it is considered artful. Think of the work of Eric Draven in The Crow (the good version) or the titular John Wick. Yet, when women seek retribution, arguably for something more devastating, and sadly commonplace, their vengeance usually comes at the cost of their own life.  This is a part of The Rape Culture that is rarely discussed: when women are allowed to be saviors or vengeance demons, they must also be punished for it. Too much feminine independence threatens the masculine structures of the oligarchic patriarchy. Women in these stories are always being “rained in”, they have “gone too far”, or are shown to have remorse for their actions. Meanwhile, men will carve whole bloody paths through entire civilizations with little introspection, consequence or comeuppance. They are singularly focused and when they have had their fill, they often die because there was nothing left inside them but rage. When that is gone, there is nothing left. Men are often depicted as an instrument through which that rage worked through.



The impact of myths and superstitions on the Real life of Cats

  The overall impact of the religious persecution of cats by Christianity and the overwhelming durability of cat themed superstitions that are reproduced in popular culture, specifically in film, have an indelibly direct impact into the lives of actual cats. Even though cats are the second largest animal to be adopted in the United States with 26% of household owning at least one cat, this pales in comparison to the number of households that own dogs (45%). The entire pet industry produced a revenue of 157 billion dollars in 2023. This includes nutrition, supplies/medicines, veterinarian care, live animal purchases, and other services.  Of that, it is a 60/40 split between dogs and cats. Fewer cats are housed as pets when compared to dogs, and people spend less on their cats than their dogs. Part of this statistic can be attributed to the simple fact that cats are (typically) smaller animals requiring less maintenance and care.[6] Yet, this does not account for the infrastructure of boarding companies, grooming salons, specialty shops and segregated parks that revolve around dogs. This creates a culture that is consistently more welcoming and understanding to the dog parent, than to the cat parent. There is a level of cultural capital to dog ownership that cat owners have yet to experience (Bourdieu 1984). Dogs have been commodified by our culture as secondary children in ways that cats still are ostracized. This can partially be explained by the subservience that dogs feel when living with a family. Most aim to please and have fierce loyalty. Whereas, while cats are very much social creatures, and enjoy being part of a family, they perceive themselves as being the most important creature in the house, or more generously, see everyone on equal footing with themselves. This is misinterpreted by many pet parents as independence or aloofness. It is neither. Cats aren’t immediately intimidated and subjugated by humans just by our size. In fact, they tend to see us as gangly stupid, big bipedal cats. Thus, unlike dogs in which their service and loyalty was bred into them through generations of domestication from wolves to dogs, cat’s affection, admiration and respect, must be earned by their humans. Any good cat parent will confirm, it is worth it[7]

Additionally, cats have been blamed for a variety of social ills throughout history either as a direct cause or an adjacent accessory. Cats were blamed for the spread of the black plague. Ironically however, it was their annihilation due to this false belief that contributed to the proliferation of the disease since the cats were killing and eating the true carriers…the rats. These negative myths and superstitions also impact cat adoption and euthanasia rates. Black cats are only being adopted at about 10 % of all cats adopted, while they make up 74 % of cat euthanasia. This causes many black cats to live out their lives in shelters. In correlation, many shelters do not adopt out black cats in an around Halloween because of an unsubstantiated sense threat of violence against them, or (more commonly) the likelihood of the cat being returned when the holiday is over.     

 

CONCLUSION

The continuation of these myths and superstitions about black cats that were originally used to reinforce a religiously oligarchic patriarchy which eventually spanned cultures, and infiltrated our popular culture has left an ineradicable effect on the lives of cats. This unfortunately obfuscates the health benefits of cat ownership. In addition to the common factors of pet ownership with its increase in overall health, reducing stress and increasing serotonin and dopamine; purring cat frequencies have been shown to help heal injuries and reduce inflammation. With more accurate testimonials from good cat parents, and a more accurate depiction of Cats in popular media, hopefully these myths and superstitions about black cats can soon be dispelled.

 

Author’s Note: This article was written during the processing of my grief from the loss of my cat Poncho.  He is now with his sister Mia. I love you. My floofy little fascist.   

 




REFERENCES

Bourdieu Pierre 1987. Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste. Massachusetts: Harvard University Press

Durkheim, Emile 2001.  The Elementary Forms of Religious Life New York: Oxxford University Press

Weber Max 2002. The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism and other Writings New York: penguin Publishing

__________2019. Economy and Society: A New Translation Massachusetts Harvard University Press.

Wilde, Layla Morgan 2017. Black Cats Tell All: True Stories and Inspiring Images New York: Cat Wisdom 101  



[1] This leans into the obvious ongoing misgendering of dogs and cats to be only associated with cisgendered masculine and feminine traits respectively 

[3] Since we typically mislabel the sex assigned category of cats, is it any wonder we are having a difficult time understanding the realities of trans-folk and the importance of their representation?

[4] One of the more recent examples of this is Mizu, the protagonist of the Blue Eye Samurai series  

[5] Think of the “Hello Kitty”esque prosperity figurines that you see in small shops in Japan.

[6] Though these numbers are rising

[7] Most Cat Owners should not have cats