Cat in Human Life and Culture: From Deity to Internet Meme
The cat (Felis catus) is the only animal that humans have domesticated but not subjugated. This is not a story of service, but of symbiotic coexistence and the profound cultural imprint this graceful animal has left in mythology, art, psychology, and the digital environment. The evolution of the human-cat relationship is a path from utilitarian partnership to a complex emotional and symbolic symbiosis.
1. Origins of Domestication: Partnership, Not Subjugation
Unlike dogs, which were domesticated for specific tasks (hunting, guarding), cats self-domesticated. Around 10,000 years ago, with the advent of agriculture in the Middle East (the Fertile Crescent), grain reserves attracted rodents. Wild steppe cats (Felis silvestris lybica), natural enemies of mice, began to settle near human settlements. People tolerated and encouraged these useful neighbors. Genetic research shows that all modern domestic cats descend from this subspecies. A key fact: cats have retained morphological and behavioral similarities with their wild ancestors, and their genome has changed significantly less than that of other domestic animals. This speaks to a shallow, selective domestication, where humans controlled mainly reproduction, but not the psyche.
2. Cultural Archetype: Sacred and Demoniacal
The dual perception of the cat — as a deity and as an accomplice of dark forces — runs through history.
Ancient Egypt (the cult of Bastet): Cats were sacred animals, embodying the goddess of fertility, the domestic hearth, and the lunar light of Bastet. Their killing was punishable by death, and after the death of an animal, the family observed mourning by shaving their eyebrows. Mummies of cats were buried in special necropolises. This was the peak of the cat cult.
Medieval Europe (demonization): With the establishment of Christianity, the independent, nocturnal, and "mysterious" nature of the cat, especially the black one, led to its a ...
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