August 2005

A synchronic journal of places / beta, Summer 2005
BERLIN.placeinplaceof.net is a web-based project which uses the weblog format to present concurrent and collaborative investigations and interpretations of Berlin.

J.M.Warner

Niederschlags- wahrscheinlichkeit

Language is tricky - I was curious about this word for weeks before I bothered to ask a friend to define it.

Her response is as follows:

Well, it is not so absurd as it looks:
+ niederschlag - all what comes down from the skies, usually one would connect it to rain though.
You can break it down still to:
+ nieder - old german word for ‘down’ or ‘under’ (in austria it still exists as such)
+ schlag - literally it means bash, beat, knock, punch.. (in austria it is whipped cream)
and then
+ wahrscheinlichkeit- probability
it is built out of
+ wahrscheinlich - likely, or probable, or supposable..
this you can break down also -
+ wahr - true
+ schein - appearance, but also bogus..
+ lich - ending for adjective
and + keit - this is one of the possible german endings when transforming an adjective into a noun.. so actually it is very simple

sky.jpg

In the end - Niederschlagswahrscheinlichkeit = a chance of rain.

Posted by Meredith at 11:36 on August 26, 2005

Women and War

plotzensee.jpg

Today we visited Gedenkstätte Plötzensee, the site of the prison where many victims of National Socialism were murdered. I also finished Albert Speers Memoir. Then I saw a blip about Cindy Sheehan on CNN. Last, I started slowly into some reading on my ever unfinished thesis. These four moments culminated in the start of some ideas about women and war. I have not come to any great revelations, so I will just post a few disparate quotes and images that are only now starting to gel into something solid.

1. A trip to Gedenkstätte Plötzensee today to deposit an usPunkt reveal to me a significant number of women involved in acts of resistance during WWII. Knowing that, of course, they existed, I was pleased to see them represented at the memorial.

2. Albert Speer (Hitler’s Architect and then Minister of Armaments) writes about his argument against foreign labor (prisoners from the occupied territories) to increase Germany’s armament production during WWII. He suggests German woman as a viable source of labor, following in the footsteps of the Americans (and Germany’s previous actions during WWI). But his argument in favor of German women working in the armaments factories was put down by a Goering - Sauckel combo: “Sauckel laid great weight on the danger that factory work might inflict moral harm upon German womanhood; not only might their “psychic and emotional” life be affected, but also their ability to bear.” [from: “Inside the Third Reich”]

3. Cindy Sheehan, who’s son was killed in Iraq, is camped out at the Bush Ranch in Crawford, Texas. She is the first person the U.S. in a long time to successfully draw attention to the Iraq War with and anti-war stance. I am well aware of the media’s roll in this process, but I think it is worth noting that her pain as a mother is what is most often used to legitimize her argument.

4. From “Spinster: An Evolving Stereotype Revealed Through Film” by Deborah J. Mustard

After WWII, there was an overwhelming resurgence of family values – the world needed the naturally gentle mothering of women after all it had been through (O’Brien, 1973).  In the United States, the pressure was on for women to marry, raise families, and fulfill the American dream.  After all, these were the values that we were fighting for in the war.  Because women had assumed employment in various occupations to help the war effort, it was now acceptable for single women to work.  But it still wasn’t acceptable that that ultimately these women might not marry (O’Brien, 1973).   It was expected that most women would leave their jobs, now that the men were returning home and rejoining the workforce, and go back home where they belonged in their domestic role of wife and mother.  Margaret Meade surmised that in the 1950’s unmarried women became virtually non-existent because society couldn’t afford to tolerate them (O’Brien, 1973).  But this wouldn’t last for long.

ww2_knit.jpg

image credit

Posted by Meredith at 23:08 on August 18, 2005

Tram

There is something so different about the tram—different from the bus, the train and certainly the car. In Berlin the trams were developed primarily by the East, and the PT divide is still quite tangible. The tram gives you the luxury of being immersed in the city—similar to the car, but it is physically connected to the space. This connection is what separates it from the bus—which can be effected by detours, traffic jams, accidents etc. The tram is its own shared bubble gliding through the city. But I am also drawn to the newness of this experience that makes it feel somewhat exotic. The whirring noise of the acceleration, its absolute regularity and its lovely glow as it sweeps through the city on a dark night—it is a mobile Edward Hopper.

The tram’s existence in the East and near disappearance in the West seems right on considering how street cars disappeared in the U.S. And since the U.S. was friendly with the West it would be obvious for them to follow in our unsustainable and dull, bus-like existence. Seems that GM single-handedly put the Trolley industry out of business all across America, buying them up and installing new GM buses (they were convicted in the U.S. Supreme Court). But there are alternative theories about the demise of the Streetcar like this Berkley’s Institute for Transportation Studies piece that argues America’s trolley lines were doomed to be eliminated. GM just accelerated the process.

Few trolleys remain in the U.S., although Philadelphia (my soon to be home) boasts a single line from the west into center city (though the Girard Avenue Line may have started running again this summer). My suspicion is that Philadelphia was in the fortunate position of being too poor to destroy the actual tracks so the infrastructure is still there and I think is being considered for redevelopment. I am determined to live near one of these lines in an attempt to find some pleasure in getting around.

New trolley systems in the U.S. are more often “light rail” systems (not sure if there is anything really different except for the fancy name). Champaign-Urbana (where I just left and had lived for the last three years) also had a very successful trolley to connect the two towns to one another and the surrounding communities. But of course that is long gone, though there has been talk of light rail in the past few years. You can see it is often met by abrupt and anonymous opposition (C-U image below). Perhaps Champaign-Urbana will reconsider under the influence of this weeks surging oil prices.

lightrail.jpg

Posted by Meredith at 10:14 on August 13, 2005

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