Thursday, April 26, 2012

crazy cat ladies and pop culture


Image: catversushuman


Do you ever brood over things society thinks are crazy? Or maybe you are even part of the craziness?

Remember Eleanor Abernathy from The Simpsons? The old lady with grey hair surrounded by cats, also known as... the Crazy Cat Lady. She’s a serious stereotype. An old spinster living in a squalid hovel, unable to express anything but incoherent gibberish, cats circling around her, obviously disillusioned. What we don’t get to see at first instance is that she is, in fact, an intelligent person who had to face issues beyond her understanding. She ran for mayor and addressed issues such as public education, health care, and the economic situation in what was then Springfield. This may be shocking news, but this year’s presidential elections in the US are interlaced with the exact same issues. Those are recurring themes, and the caricatured depiction of opposing political parties in a sitcom are often far more telling than in-depth analyses in well-known platforms, such as TheEconomist or The New York Times. (Though sometimes these analyses are on point and challenging.)
 
What I am taking aim at here is the politics of stereotypes. An intelligent, ambitious young woman running for office fails to succeed in a male-dominated environment. Eleanor Abernathy was forced to pull up short of the career she desired; she realised that the world was not ready for her. And in a way, she was not ready to face the world. It doesn’t make a difference if she communicates on important issues, such as health care and education, or produces incoherent gibberish because no one other than her cats is ready to listen. Not only is her character and the insight it brings a satire upon American politics, but it also points to a sad truth about women in positions of power, or a lack thereof.  Now it doesn’t seem that crazy after all. 

But about those cats: Why is it that mostly women seem to be drawn to cats? Cats just seem to reflect their personalities. We know that cats too can be moody, picky, hard to please, belligerent, sneaky, confrontational, iffy, PMSy, cuddly, hungry, know-it-all-ish, conceited, ladylike, and overall hard to read. They communicate on a higher level. This might also be the reason why ‘crazy cat lady’ is such a pejorative term. It is difficult to understand the complexity of a split personality. Do be honest if you’re female; are you able to comprehend your own mind at all times? Let’s admit as much that we are difficult to handle, and our thoughts even more difficult to grasp. But Eleanor Abernathy is not a good example because we don’t get to hear much besides her unintelligible jabber. There is, however, an even better example that also challenges the female part of the craziness and contributes to the notion of intelligent awkwardness. 
Sheldon Cooper.

Though male, he definitely falls into the category of the crazy cat ladies. Sheldon is the embodiment of a cat lady. His thoughts are too sophisticated for the average mind to comprehend, his soft skills are woefully lacking, his love life is...well, let’s call him “romantically challenged”. In season four of The Big Bang Theory, Sheldon becomes infatuated with cats. Now, from earlier seasons we know that he needs the “Soft Kitty” song to get better when he’s sick. The lulling “purr purr purr, little ball of fur” seems to do the trick. Nothing special here, everyone loves a good purr. But the writers took it a step further in season four. Sheldon has an argument with his girlfriend and seeks shelter and understanding in what comes closest to the mind and personality of a woman – a cat. The only problem is that he keeps taking on more cats: until we are confronted with the much loved stereotype of the crazy cat lady. Sheldon’s vocabulary and body movement change so drastically in this episode that he even passes for a lady. 

Sheldon’s story here is that it marks a noteworthy shift from the notion that only females seek loyal companionship in non-human feline creatures. As Sheldon puts it, “Cats make wonderful companions. They don’t argue or question my intellectual authority.”

Whereas cat ladies are generally portrayed as being out of touch with reality, pop culture has recently begun to explore the more sensitive and spiritual relationship between man and animal. Whereas up to now it has only been accepted for the dog to be man’s best friend, society is slowly becoming acquainted with the idea of a cat being (wo)man’s best friend, without it sounding (too) awkward or inappropriately stereotypical. 
It’s about time.



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