Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Maneki Neko



Here's a question for Erasmus, who I heard is lurking on the blog, and who is an authority on cats.

Usually the Japanese lucky 'neko' has a raised paw - what does it signify?

Why doesn't this one have a raised paw?

Ophrys

5 comments:

Unknown said...

I'm afraid you're in for a unpleasant surprise here. Did you check for two tails? A much more ancient creature than the Maneki Neko (lucky neko) is the Nekomata. The Neko-mata is a haunted cat spirit. It has a split tale, walks on its hind feet's and controls the dead. As a precaution you might want to cut the tail of all your kittens.

Meow meow, Erasmus

JulieW said...

Now that's interesting (even if not an answer). And concerning your suggested remedy: In some Asian countries a cat's tail is docked or cut when it is a kitten - I think there is some local belief that this somehow limits its 'magical' powers. Then there are naturally kink-tailed cats and the famous Manx cat of course - what about those?

So maybe the centre of a cat's power is seen to be in its tail?

Ophrys

MissAD said...

Don't forget there's also the Japanese Bobtail cat, which comes ready tailless just in case.

JulieW said...

...so maybe it's a myth that the Asian cats'tails are docked? I can't recall who told me or where I read it. The Japanese or S.E Asian bobtail would explain it all!

Ophrys

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_Bobtail

MissAD said...

Maybe, cats tails are docked to mimic a Bobtail? Or perhaps a tailess cat was bred to avoid docking?

The culture of docking ears and tails on animals is a very strange one.