Hannah Höch’S Radical Imagination: a Study on the Transformation of Reality Through Space, Language and a Politicised Psychoanalysis

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Hannah Höch’S Radical Imagination: a Study on the Transformation of Reality Through Space, Language and a Politicised Psychoanalysis Hannah Höch’s radical imagination: a study on the transformation of reality through space, language and a politicised psychoanalysis. Volume 1 of 2: Written thesis Andrea Kay Tabernacle UCL PhD Thesis September, 2017 1 Declaration I, Andrea Kay Tabernacle confirm that the work presented in this thesis is my own. Where information has been derived from other sources, I confirm that this has been indicated in the thesis. 2 Abstract This thesis presents an analysis of Höch’s work in relation to the idea of radical imagination. It proposes that Höch activated radical imagination in her work, aiming to transform perceptions of reality, in order to create social change. In pursuit of such change, Höch was influenced both by psychoanalysis and philosophy, in particular, by Salomo Friedländer’s concept of creative indifference. The target for radical imagination is the dismantlement and reconstruction of the prevailing moral, social and aesthetic order, from its root. This study argues that its effect derives from its rootedness in the perception of subjective realities. Beginning in the unconscious processes of looking and the construction of concepts of self and other, it is radical in means as well as in intention towards fundamental changes in values. While not directed at specific political aims, it is argued here that there is, nonetheless, an ethical and political imperative. The research has been carried out through an examination of Höch’s work in context, including by reference to Walter Benjamin and Sigmund Freud. Her work is also considered in relation to other Dada artists and the writer, Til Brugman. This study also uses art-practice to model, speculate and reflect on radical imagination. Both Friedländer and Höch develop their ideas through art: Höch in her varied practice and Friedländer through grotesque stories. Höch’s development of methods to enact radical imagination can be understood as akin to contemporary practice-based research. In foregrounding Höch’s ideas about imagination and reality, from her statements and the visual evidence of her work, this thesis aims to produce a new interpretation of Höch’s work, based on the attribution of agency to Höch as a pioneering cultural producer: her work contributing to a wider articulation of ideas about imagination with importance beyond the discipline of Fine Art. 3 Table of contents Declaration ......................................................................................................................... 2 Abstract ............................................................................................................................... 3 Table of contents .............................................................................................................. 4 List of figures .................................................................................................................... 8 Acknowledgements ...................................................................................................... 26 Prologue ........................................................................................................................... 28 Introduction .................................................................................................................... 30 Dada............................................................................................................................... 37 Biographical approaches ............................................................................................. 41 Social context ............................................................................................................... 47 Methodology ................................................................................................................ 54 Chapter one: Höch’s radical imagination .............................................................. 62 Imagination and Höch ................................................................................................ 62 Part 1. Meanings of imagination ................................................................................ 71 The contested field of imagination ........................................................................... 76 Part 2. Imagination and radical transformation....................................................... 80 Art, reality and change ................................................................................................ 86 Höch’s radical imagination ......................................................................................... 91 Chapter two: Reality and space: Höch’s metaphysical imagination ............. 98 Creative Indifference ........................................................................................................ 112 Höch’s metaphysical space ....................................................................................... 120 Creative indifference, gestalt and space .................................................................. 132 Subjectivity, symbolism and space .......................................................................... 145 4 Chapter three: Imagination and language ........................................................... 172 An art that speaks ...................................................................................................... 173 Representability .......................................................................................................... 179 The imaginary bridge ................................................................................................. 185 The grotesque ............................................................................................................. 188 Metaphors and cross-sections .................................................................................. 198 Word/image................................................................................................................ 206 Multisensorality in word/image ............................................................................... 219 Chapter four: Radical imagination’s unconscious eye ..................................... 240 Surrealism, psychoanalysis and chance ................................................................... 243 Politicising the unconscious ..................................................................................... 249 The ‘Mynona-Segal-circle’......................................................................................... 253 The ‘Uncanny’ ................................................................................................................ 258 Höch’s use of psychoanalytic ideas ......................................................................... 274 The unconscious eye in action ................................................................................. 281 Chapter five: Body as a site of imaginative transformation ............................ 287 Embodied imagination and the soul ....................................................................... 288 Freud’s models of the psychical apparatus ............................................................. 294 Warenhaus der Liebe as an allegory for the psyche ................................................... 312 Mechanisms of transformation ................................................................................ 319 Food – image – money ............................................................................................. 336 Discussion and conclusions ..................................................................................... 345 Enactment of radical imagination ....................................................................... 349 Reality and space: Höch’s metaphysical imagination ........................................ 349 Radical imagination’s unconscious eye ............................................................... 354 Body as a site of imaginative transformation ..................................................... 355 5 Conclusion .............................................................................................................. 358 Epilogue ........................................................................................................................ 362 Bibliography ................................................................................................................. 363 Volume 2 of 2: Appendices ........................................................................................... 383 Table of Contents ........................................................................................................ 384 Appendix 1: Supplementary illustrations ............................................................. 386 Appendix 2: Galerie texts for De Bron, 1929, and Galerie Franz, 1949 ........ 402 Appendix 3: Fantastische Kunst ............................................................................. 405 Appendix 4: Grotesk ................................................................................................... 408 Appendix 5: Warenhaus der Liebe ......................................................................... 410 Appendix 6. Related practice: discussion and documentation .................... 416 Appendix 7: Hannah Höch - Timeline ................................................................. 498 Apendix 8: Text from which Textual Deluge was made ................................. 505 Appendix
Recommended publications
  • Libertarian Marxism Mao-Spontex Open Marxism Popular Assembly Sovereign Citizen Movement Spontaneism Sui Iuris
    Autonomist Marxist Theory and Practice in the Current Crisis Brian Marks1 University of Arizona School of Geography and Development [email protected] Abstract Autonomist Marxism is a political tendency premised on the autonomy of the proletariat. Working class autonomy is manifested in the self-activity of the working class independent of formal organizations and representations, the multiplicity of forms that struggles take, and the role of class composition in shaping the overall balance of power in capitalist societies, not least in the relationship of class struggles to the character of capitalist crises. Class composition analysis is applied here to narrate the recent history of capitalism leading up to the current crisis, giving particular attention to China and the United States. A global wave of struggles in the mid-2000s was constituitive of the kinds of working class responses to the crisis that unfolded in 2008-10. The circulation of those struggles and resultant trends of recomposition and/or decomposition are argued to be important factors in the balance of political forces across the varied geography of the present crisis. The whirlwind of crises and the autonomist perspective The whirlwind of crises (Marks, 2010) that swept the world in 2008, financial panic upon food crisis upon energy shock upon inflationary spiral, receded temporarily only to surge forward again, leaving us in a turbulent world, full of possibility and peril. Is this the end of Neoliberalism or its retrenchment? A new 1 Published under the Creative Commons licence: Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works Autonomist Marxist Theory and Practice in the Current Crisis 468 New Deal or a new Great Depression? The end of American hegemony or the rise of an “imperialism with Chinese characteristics?” Or all of those at once? This paper brings the political tendency known as autonomist Marxism (H.
    [Show full text]
  • The South African Sale London Wednesday 19 March 2014 W1S 1SR
    Bonhams 101 New Bond Street the south african sale London Wednesday 19 March 2014 W1S 1SR +44 (0) 20 7447 7447 +44 (0) 20 7447 7400 fax the south african sale Ӏ New Bond Street, London Ӏ Wednesday March 19 2014 21431 International Auctioneers and Valuers – bonhams.com lot 15 Irma Stern Zanzibar Woman the South afrIcan Sale Wednesday 19 March at 2pm New Bond Street, London PhyI S cal condItIon of Vw Ie Ing enquIrIeS lotS In thIS auctIon Sunday 16 March Giles Peppiatt MRICS 11.00 to 15.00 +44 (0) 20 7468 8355 PLEASE NOTE THAT THERE IS Monday 17 March NO REFERENCE IN THIS 9.00 to 16.30 Hannah O’Leary CATALOGUE TO THE PHYSICAL Tuesday 18 March +44 (0) 20 7468 8213 CONDITION OF ANY LOT. 9.00 to 16.30 INTENDING BIDDERS MUST Wednesday 19 March Elizabeth Callinicos SATISFY THEMSELVES AS TO 9.00 to 12 noon +44 (0) 20 7468 8216 THE CONDITION OF ANY LOT AS SPECIFIED IN CLAUSE 14 PreVIew of hIghlIghtS [email protected] OF THE NOTICE TO BIDDERS 580 Madison Avenue, New York CONTAINED AT THE END OF 19 - 21 February Jonathan Horwich THIS CATALOGUE. 10.00 to 17.00 Global Director, Picture Sales +44 (0) 20 7468 8280 As a courtesy to intending Sale number [email protected] bidders, Bonhams will provide a 21431 written Indication of the physical South Africa condition of lots in this sale if a catalogue Penny Culverwell request is received up to 24 £25.00 +27 71 342 2670 hours before the auction starts.
    [Show full text]
  • Berger ENG Einseitig Künstlerisch
    „One-sidedly Artistic“ Georg Kolbe in the Nazi Era By Ursel Berger 0 One of the most discussed topics concerning Georg Kolbe involves his work and his stance during the Nazi era. These questions have also been at the core of all my research on Kolbe and I have frequently dealt with them in a variety of publications 1 and lectures. Kolbe’s early work and his artistic output from the nineteen twenties are admired and respected. Today, however, a widely held position asserts that his later works lack their innovative power. This view, which I also ascribe to, was not held by most of Kolbe’s contemporaries. In order to comprehend the position of this sculptor as well as his overall historical legacy, it is necessary, indeed crucial, to examine his œuvre from the Nazi era. It is an issue that also extends over and beyond the scope of a single artistic existence and poses the overriding question concerning the role of the artist in a dictatorship. Georg Kolbe was born in 1877 and died in 1947. He lived through 70 years of German history, a time characterized by the gravest of political developments, catastrophes and turning points. He grew up in the German Empire, celebrating his first artistic successes around 1910. While still quite young, he was active (with an artistic mission) in World War I. He enjoyed his greatest successes in the Weimar Republic, especially in the latter half of the nineteen twenties—between hyperinflation and the Great Depression. He was 56 years old when the Nazis came to power in 1933 and 68 years old when World War II ended in 1945.
    [Show full text]
  • Cashbox Subscription: Please Check Classification;
    July 13, 1985 NEWSPAPER $3.00 v.'r '-I -.-^1 ;3i:v l‘••: • •'i *. •- i-s .{' *. » NE RIAA CERTIFICATIONS ANNOUNCED R.E.M. AFFILIATES LIVE-AID Crass Roots Audience Blossoms TWORK, GEAR FOR Story on Page 13 WEHIND THE BULLETS: TEARS FOR FEARS #1 MTV AWARDS ENTER NEXT PHASE GUEST EDITORIAL: AL KOOPER SUBSCRIPTION ORDER: PLEASE ENTER MY CASHBOX SUBSCRIPTION: PLEASE CHECK CLASSIFICATION; RETAILER ARTIST I NAME VIDEO JUKEBOXES DEALER AMUSEMENT GAMES COMPANY TITLE ONE-STOP VENDING MACHINES DISTRIBUTOR RADIO SYNDICATOR ADDRESS BUSINESS HOME APT. NO. RACK JOBBER RADIO CONSULTANT PUBLISHER INDEPENDENT PROMOTION CITY STATE/PROVINCE/COUNTRY ZIP RECORD COMPANY INDEPENDENT MARKETING RADIO OTHER: NATURE OF BUSINESS PAYMENT ENCLOSED SIGNATURE DATE USA OUTSIDE USA FOR 1 YEAR I YEAR (52 ISSUES) $125.00 AIRMAIL $195.00 6 MONTHS (26 ISSUES) S75.00 1 YEAR FIRST CLASS/AIRMAIL SI 80.00 01SHBCK (Including Canada & Mexico) 330 WEST 58TH STREET • NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10019 ' 01SH BOX HE INTERNATIONAL MUSIC / COIN MACHINE / HOME ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY VOLUME XLIX — NUMBER 5 — July 13, 1985 C4SHBO( Guest Editorial : T Taking Care Of Our Own ^ GEORGE ALBERT i. President and Publisher By A I Kooper MARK ALBERT 1 The recent and upcoming gargantuan Ethiopian benefits once In a very true sense. Bob Geldof has helped reawaken our social Vice President and General Manager “ again raise an issue that has troubled me for as long as I’ve been conscience; now we must use it to address problems much closer i SPENCE BERLAND a part of this industry. We, in the American music business do to home.
    [Show full text]
  • Detlef Thiel
    So hat diese unbedingte Reinheit & Richtigkeit, Pünktlichkeit des Innens, des ICH, am Außen, am Bruch, an der Differenz, dem Abgrund: an Teilung, Trennung, Wechsel, Zufall denn ihr Übungsmaterial, ihr Nessushemd, ihre Feuerprobe, ihre Folterung. Salomo Friedlaender/Mynona Detlef Thiel Maßnahmen des Erscheinens Friedlaender/Mynona im Gespräch mit Schelling, Husserl, Thiel - Maßnahmen des Erscheinens Benjamin und Derrida libri nigri 23 ISBN 978-3-88309-782-4 23 Verlag Traugott Bautz GmbH Detlef Thiel Maßnahmen des Erscheinens LIBRI NIGRI 23 Herausgegeben von Hans Rainer Sepp Wissenschaftlicher Beirat Suzi Adams · Adelaide │ Babette Babich · New York │ Kimberly Baltzer-Jaray · Waterloo, Ontario │ Damir Barbarić · Zagreb │ Marcus Brainard · London │ Martin Cajthaml · Olomouc │ Mauro Carbone · Lyon │ Chan Fai Cheung · Hong Kong │ Cristian Ciocan · Bucure şti │ Ion Copoeru · Cluj-Napoca │ Renato Cristin · Trieste │ Riccardo Dottori · Roma │ Eddo Evink · Groningen │ Matthias Flatscher · Wien │ Dimitri Ginev · Sofia │ Jean-Christophe Goddard · Toulouse │ Andrzej Gniazdowski · Warszawa │ Ludger Hagedorn · Wien │ Terri J. Hennings · Freiburg │ Seongha Hong · Jeollabukdo │ Edmundo Johnson · Santiago de Chile │ René Kaufmann · Dresden │ Vakhtang Kebuladze · Kyjiw │ Dean Komel · Ljubljana │ Pavlos Kontos · Patras │ Kwok-ying Lau · Hong Kong │ Mette Lebech · Maynooth │ Nam-In Lee · Seoul │ Monika Małek · Wrocław │ Balázs Mezei · Budapest │ Viktor Molchanov · Moskwa │ Liangkang Ni · Guanghzou │ Cathrin Nielsen · Frankfurt am Main │ Ashraf Noor · Jerusalem
    [Show full text]
  • A Selective Study of the Writings of Kafka, Kubin, Meyrink, Musil and Schnitzler
    _________________________________________________________________________Swansea University E-Theses The literary dream in German Central Europe, 1900-1925: A selective study of the writings of Kafka, Kubin, Meyrink, Musil and Schnitzler. Vrba, Marya How to cite: _________________________________________________________________________ Vrba, Marya (2011) The literary dream in German Central Europe, 1900-1925: A selective study of the writings of Kafka, Kubin, Meyrink, Musil and Schnitzler.. thesis, Swansea University. http://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa42396 Use policy: _________________________________________________________________________ This item is brought to you by Swansea University. Any person downloading material is agreeing to abide by the terms of the repository licence: copies of full text items may be used or reproduced in any format or medium, without prior permission for personal research or study, educational or non-commercial purposes only. The copyright for any work remains with the original author unless otherwise specified. The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holder. Permission for multiple reproductions should be obtained from the original author. Authors are personally responsible for adhering to copyright and publisher restrictions when uploading content to the repository. Please link to the metadata record in the Swansea University repository, Cronfa (link given in the citation reference above.) http://www.swansea.ac.uk/library/researchsupport/ris-support/ The Literary Dream in German Central Europe, 1900-1925 A Selective Study of the Writings of Kafka, Kubin, Meyrink, Musil and Schnitzler Mary a Vrba Thesis submitted to Swansea University in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Modern Languages Swansea University 2011 ProQuest Number: 10798104 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted.
    [Show full text]
  • Council Communism Or Councilism? - the Period of Transition a Book Review by Fredo Corvo
    Council communism or councilism? - The period of transition A book review by Fredo Corvo Book review of Philippe Bourrinet “The Dutch and German Communist Left (1900-68); ‘Neither Lenin nor Trotsky nor Stalin!”, ‘All workers must think for themselves!’”, Leiden/Boston (Brill) ISBN 978-90-04-26977-4. This book in fact is based on a master thesis in French language, defended at the Sorbonne University Paris, 1988. Since then editions in several languages appeared, with or without permission of the author, or of the International Communist Current, who claims to be its ‘collective author’. Therefor it is unfortunately that this new edition by Brill doesn’t explain the differences with the master thesis. For readers that know the Porcupine Press English language edition, I found two additions. A fragment preceding chapter 1, on Religion, Capitalism and colonial Empire: From the ‘Golden Age’ to the Decline, gives a short overview of the history of the Netherlands before industrialization. A text added to chapter 11, International Council-Communists up to the 1970s adds interesting information of studies published since 1987, which can be found in the bibliography. On the other hand, some of the more recent works are missing here as well as in the 58 pages long section ‘Further reading’: for example, Gerber’s and Boekelman's biographies of Anton Pannekoek. No doubt this study is impressive for many reasons, of which its international scope and its internationalist approach are the most important. No coincidence the author identifies with the Communist left, consisting mainly of the German-Dutch left and the Italian left, having published several studies on the latter as well.
    [Show full text]
  • Exhibitions 2021/22
    Press Release Berlin, 23.9.21 , © Privatsammlung © , 1910 Ferdinand Hodler , Der Frühling, ca. Ferdinand Hodler and Modernist Berlin 10.9.21 – 17.1.22 Ferdinand Hodler’s evocative figure paintings, moun- tain landscapes and portraits are Modernist icons. The Swiss artist (1853–1918), an influential force in symbolism, drew great international acclaim even in his own lifetime. Contemporaries valued Hodler above all as a master of human characterisation: as the artist Paul Klee noted in 1911, he could “create the soul by painting the body”. Few people realise today that Hodler’s path to fame lay through Berlin. At the dawn of the 20th century, the capital of the German Berlinische Galerie, © Foto: Noshe Reich had become a leading hub of European art alongside Paris, Vienna and Munich. These cities Exhibitions offered Hodler a chance to publicise his work outside Switzerland. The exhibition “Ferdinand Hodler and Modernist Berlin” traces his success on the banks of 2 021/22 the Spree. From 1898 until the outbreak of the First World War, the artist exhibited here almost annually: first at the Great Berlin Art Exhibition, then at the Berlin Secession and in a number of galleries. The presentation at the Berlinische Galerie will bring together about 50 paintings by Hodler from German and Swiss collections, including 30 from the Kunst- museum Bern, our partner in this collaboration. It will also feature works by artists who exhibited with Hodler in Berlin, including Lovis Corinth, Walter Leistikow, Hans Thoma and Julie Wolfthorn. The exhibition is a cooperation between the Berlinische Galerie and the Kunstmuseum Bern.
    [Show full text]
  • Download the Full PDF of Berlin Journal
    2014 THE BERLIN JOURNAL ALL f A Magazine from the American Academy in Berlin Number Twenty-Seven Fall 2014 NUMBER 27 THE BERLIN JOURNAL THE BERLIN THE AMERIcAN AcAdEMy Celebrating Twenty Years fIcTION IN BERLIN Jonathan Lethem, Mynona, Nicole Krauss, Adam Ross barkOw LEIBINgER Architectural Portfolio with an Essay by Hal Foster beatriz colomina Collaboration in Modern Architecture THE holbrookE fORUM Harold Hongju Koh and Louise Arbour on Peace and Justice MONIcA black Spiritual Redemption in Postwar Germany Zeit für eine Revolution. ø U n i t e . Nie wieder Einzeltarife. Ein individueller Preis für Ihr gesamtes Unternehmen. Minuten-, SMS- und Datenkontingente fl exibel nach Ihrem Bedarf defi nieren. Ein System, so intelligent wie keines zuvor. ø Unite. ø Business – Mehr unternehmen. Jetzt 3 Monate kostenlos testen* 0800 - 10 90 878 | o2unite.de Telefónica Germany GmbH & Co. OHG, Georg-Brauchle-Ring 23 – 25, 80992 München *Bei O2 Unite greifen alle Mitarbeiter eines Unternehmens auf vom Unternehmen festgelegte Kontingente für nationale und internationale Gesprächs-, SMS- und Datenvolumina (= Pools) zu. Mit Beginn der Try&Buy-Phase schließt der Kunde einen Vertrag mit einer Mindestvertragslaufzeit von 27 Monaten ab. Während der ersten 3 Monate (Try&Buy) werden die monatlichen Grundgebühren der gebuchten nationalen Voice-, Data- und SMS-Pools zu 100 % rabattiert, für eine etwaige Überschreitung der monatlichen Volumina dieser Pools entstehen keinerlei Kosten. Die Rabattierung im Rahmen von Try&Buy gilt nur für das initial ausgewählte nationale Poolportfolio. Eine Anpassung der Poolvolumina ist für alle nationalen und internationalen Pools bis zum Ende der Try&Buy-Phase jederzeit möglich. Während der Try&Buy-Phase nicht genutzte monatliche Pool Volumina der nationalen Try&Buy-Pools stehen im Folgemonat nicht zur Verfügung.
    [Show full text]
  • Worship Service-As It Was Recently in Fax: 847-742-1407 My Congregation
    A nd the Word became flesh and lived among us ... full ef grace and truth. -JOHN 1:14 OuR PRAYER__ FOR YOU THIS CHRISTMAS ... is that in hearing Jesus' story anew you embrace "the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge;' ... that you tell the story to others at home and afar­ a living witness for Christ in the world, ... that in times of terror and fear you keep alive the vision of peace of the Prince of Peace, ... and that the Word engage and embolden you as an instrument of grace and truth. Church of the Brethren GENERAL BOARD DECEMBER 2001 VOL.150 NO.11 WWW.BRETHREN.ORG Editor: Fletcher Farrar Publisher: Wendy McFadden News: Walt Wiltschek Advertising: Russ Matteson Subscriptions: Verneda Cole Design: Cedar House Group ONTHECOVER 1 O Enduring peace This month's cover is a watercolor As Brethren seek ways of faithfulness in the wake of Sept. 11 attacks by Don Stocksdale of Union City, and retaliation, they move from reaction to action. Brethren Witness Ind. For more than 50 years, he was director David Radcliff outlines ways to pursue God's justice and an active part of the Pleasant Valley peace. Included are inspiring stories of peaceful actions some churches have taken. congregation, in rural western Ohio. He is well-known regionally for his paintings of Midwest landscapes. 18 Christmas in Baghdad This Mideast landscape, however, Mel Lehman, who plans to lead a Church of the Brethren delega­ was not too much of a stretch for tion to Iraq this month, tells of the suffering he saw on an earlier him.
    [Show full text]
  • Sretenovic Dejan Red Horizon
    Dejan Sretenović RED HORIZON EDITION Red Publications Dejan Sretenović RED HORIZON AVANT-GARDE AND REVOLUTION IN YUGOSLAVIA 1919–1932 kuda.org NOVI SAD, 2020 The Social Revolution in Yugoslavia is the only thing that can bring about the catharsis of our people and of all the immorality of our political liberation. Oh, sacred struggle between the left and the right, on This Day and on the Day of Judgment, I stand on the far left, the very far left. Be‑ cause, only a terrible cry against Nonsense can accelerate the whisper of a new Sense. It was with this paragraph that August Cesarec ended his manifesto ‘Two Orientations’, published in the second issue of the “bimonthly for all cultural problems” Plamen (Zagreb, 1919; 15 issues in total), which he co‑edited with Miroslav Krleža. With a strong dose of revolutionary euphoria and ex‑ pressionistic messianic pathos, the manifesto demonstrated the ideational and political platform of the magazine, founded by the two avant‑garde writers from Zagreb, activists of the left wing of the Social Democratic Party of Croatia, after the October Revolution and the First World War. It was the struggle between the two orientations, the world social revolution led by Bolshevik Russia on the one hand, and the world of bourgeois counter‑revolution led by the Entente Forces on the other, that was for Cesarec pivot‑ al in determining the future of Europe and mankind, and therefore also of the newly founded Kingdom of Serbs, Cro‑ ats and Slovenes (Kingdom of SCS), which had allied itself with the counter‑revolutionary bloc.
    [Show full text]
  • Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Berlin -- Part 2: Observed Time Series
    Discussion Paper | Discussion Paper | Discussion Paper | Discussion Paper | Atmos. Meas. Tech. Discuss., 8, 2767–2791, 2015 www.atmos-meas-tech-discuss.net/8/2767/2015/ doi:10.5194/amtd-8-2767-2015 AMTD © Author(s) 2015. CC Attribution 3.0 License. 8, 2767–2791, 2015 This discussion paper is/has been under review for the journal Atmospheric Measurement Greenhouse gas Techniques (AMT). Please refer to the corresponding final paper in AMT if available. emissions of Berlin – Part 2: Observed time Use of portable FTIR spectrometers for series of XCO2 and XCH4 detecting greenhouse gas emissions of F. Hase et al. the megacity Berlin – Part 2: Observed Title Page time series of XCO2 and XCH4 Abstract Introduction F. Hase1, M. Frey1, T. Blumenstock1, J. Groß1, M. Kiel1, R. Kohlhepp2, Conclusions References G. Mengistu Tsidu1,4, K. Schäfer3, M. K. Sha1, and J. Orphal1 Tables Figures 1Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Institute for Meteorology and Climate Research (IMK-ASF), Karlsruhe, Germany J I 2German Weather Service, Offenbach, Germany 3 Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Institute for Meteorology and Climate Research J I (IMK-IFU), Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany Back Close 4Department of Physics, Addis Ababa University, P.O. Box 1176, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Full Screen / Esc Received: 19 February 2015 – Accepted: 24 February 2015 – Published: 13 March 2015 Correspondence to: F. Hase ([email protected]) Printer-friendly Version Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. Interactive Discussion 2767 Discussion Paper | Discussion Paper | Discussion Paper | Discussion Paper | Abstract AMTD Five portable Bruker EM27/SUN FTIR spectrometers have been used for the accurate 8, 2767–2791, 2015 and precise observation of column averaged abundances of CO2 and CH4 around the megacity Berlin.
    [Show full text]