26

It's well known that various characters represent real Soviet figures. Who does the cat, who is fond of shirking physical work but enjoys reaping the rewards, represent? Does the cat even have any significance in the novel?

0

6 Answers 6

18

Yes. In the words of Jesse McDevitt-Irwin:

suggests that she could represent the educated of Russia, more specifically, the educated who did not believe that communism was the correct path. She also skips out on work, which could mean the educated because they did not do physical nature. One more clue is the nature of a cat on a farm: the cat performs a service (rodent control) and receives benefits (milk, shelter). This further implies that the cat was privileged under the Czars, which further implies the wealthy, educated class.

2
  • 3
    Sorry, I've downvoted this answer because it's just a quote from somebody else, without any elaboration or arguments in your own words to support the conclusion.
    – Rand al'Thor
    Mar 17, 2019 at 8:10
  • 1
    Trouble between the Ta'veren! Mar 20, 2019 at 1:33
14

The cat does have significance, but it's hard to say who exactly she represents.

She skulks around and doesn't do any work, votes for both sides, and makes people satisfied enough that she never actually has to do anything.

the behaviour of the cat was somewhat peculiar. It was soon noticed that when there was work to be done the cat could never be found. She would vanish for hours on end, and then reappear at meal-times, or in the evening after work was over, as though nothing had happened. But she always made such excellent excuses, and purred so affectionately, that it was impossible not to believe in her good intentions.

It seems like she represents the unhelpful people of society, the thieves and criminals and people who profit over other people's work.

There's someone of that kind in every society, who has no interest in the politics and leaves in the end. This cat represents all of those people.

everyone, indeed, except the cat, who had suddenly disappeared just before Napoleon ordered the animals to assemble.

1
  • 1
    Sorry, I've downvoted this answer because it seems to be mostly just a guess "It seems like ..." - a plausible one, but without much support or justification.
    – Rand al'Thor
    Mar 17, 2019 at 8:08
11

As acknowledged above, the cat probably represents opportunistic, underground criminals who persisted after the revolution. Her attempts to lure the wild birds by offers of camaraderie are simply a modified form of her (presumed) exploitation of weaker beasts pre-Animalism. Bribery was said to be ubiquitous in Soviet Russia and the cat managing to charm the authorities could well be a reflection of this. Her impunity also captures the confused relationship Marxism-Leninism had with crime; despite the totalitarian policing, criminality that wasn’t directed against the state was ideologically couched as a hangover of capitalism and to be regarded as a mental disorder. This is possibly why the other animals are so forgiving of the way she shirks work.

The fact that she is explicitly feminine and depicted as seductive may also be an allusion to prostitution specifically. Supposedly, prostitution surged after implementation of the New Economic Policy and initial attempts by police to crack down on the practice were foiled by the lack of recourse to any penal code; again, the failure of the pigs to do anything more than question the cat captures this ineffectuality.

Her non-appearance later in the novel could correspond with the clearer codification of a penal code in the Soviet Union and the attendent punishment of law-breakers, although personally I think she just carried on with her ways and since ultimately there wasn’t any more to say about underground crime under Stalin than in any other territory, Orwell didn’t elaborate on the allegory.

0
2

The cat represents both intelligence and unsavory part of society, in a way. In short, the cat represents secret intelligence services, specifically civilian ones (KGB, CIA etc). It's spy and spy community.

The cat always lurks in the shadows, listens to other animals, watches over them. It is also the only animal which leaves the farm and visits other farms and nobody knows what it is doing there. In fact, nobody knows what it is doing anywhere, what is the work that cat does. The cat is one of the animals inherited from old system, is used then warped or discarded as the new system takes form. Cats allegiance is uncertain but it does its job well.

If you see it in the light, it is usually sleeping, it always looks lazy and harmless, a good person to confide in. It is insidious, friendly and purrs nicely. But it also has quite sharp claws and it's job is to find and remove vermin. It is a subtle form of control in the system. Cat is spying and doing subversive actions. It is a cloak and dagger compared to sword and shield of dogs.

It is also indicative when the cat leaves the farm forever (or maybe is killed). When dogs take over as open police/military force and other farm animals are so brainwashed that they report each other so cat's usefulness is diminished in the eyes of pigs. Also, the need to spy on other farms is diminished by pigs becoming friendly with them. Intelligence services greatly diminished (for a while at least) after the end of Cold War. It is indicative of dictatorship. Open and brutal forms of control are now thinking they have subdued the society so much that they don't need intelligence services any more, because they think they know everything about everyone and that there is absolutely no chance of rebellion.

0

The cat represents Russian intelligentsia. Never truly a contributing part of the communist society, the cat "emigrates" at the first sign of trouble.

1
  • 1
    Do you have any further evidence to support your answer or develop your idea? There is a previous answer saying the cat represents the intelligentsia - do you have any new evidence or analysis to add to it?
    – bobble
    Mar 2 at 14:49
-4

To my mind, the cat represents the elite group of people who are always on job hunting, the fact that she leaves and comesbback at supper time

1
  • 3
    Hey, thanks for the answer? Would it be possible for you to perhaps expand on this a bit more? Is there any support for this is in the text?
    – Mithical
    Apr 30, 2018 at 15:50

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.