In more than one image from 1900s Japan, they look hungoverGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailWe had gone to Japan, we told our daughter, to get her a maneki-neko: the good luck or beckoning cat. She is almost three. She would stay home with my mother, her grandmother. There is a maneki-neko that lives at the till of a manicure shop near our house, and she likes to stop and greet it. Japanese folklore has cats for many things, and we were grateful for this one. Before we left, we wrote letters outlining our progress towards this goal. I put the letters in envelopes for my mother to give to her, one each day. As the week passed, we would meet a mouse in the street, travel to Kyoto to catch goldfish in the river, buy a pizza - extra cheese - for the keeper of the cats.Why we had actually gone there was to be cats ourselves: to do precisely what we felt like doing whenever we felt like doing it. We roamed the streets, we sat in sunny cafe windows. We hung out at an onsen, which cats would probably not do. We went to an exhibition about animals in arts and crafts and learned that in the late 1800s, people in Japan would affectionately greet cats and dogs using the honorific -san, like Mr or Miss.Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads Continue reading...
A cat: 'They smoked pipes, played dice' | Helen Sullivan
17. června 2024 0:03
Příroda
Celý článek: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/commentisfree/article/2024/jun/18/a-cat-they-smoked-pipes-played-dice
Zdroj: The Guardian