Revolutionary Climatology: Rings of Saturn, Ringed by Red Lightning
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Revolutionary Climatology: Rings of Saturn, Ringed by Red Lightning
Revolutionary Climatology: Rings of Saturn, Ringed by Red Lightning
91
Revolutionary Climatology:
Rings of Saturn, Ringed by Red Lightning
Sarah K. Stanley
Reveal to these depraved, O Republic, by foiling their Sigfried Giedion and Laszlo Moholy-Nagy’s Building
plots, your great Medusa face, ringed by red lightning. in France within The Arcades Project drawing upon
(Workers’ song, 1850) 1
not only its content, but also its layout design.4
The layered reassembling of the book’s graphic
Introduction and textual elements becomes a media environ-
Walter Benjamin recognised that architecture and ment, rather than a mass of quotations, as The
technical media taken together were capable of Arcades Project is often dismissed. Benjamin’s
generating a new materialism. Benjamin saw the unique contribution is the multiplying of sources by
arcades as a form of infrastructure, consisting of a choosing highly charged passages closer to image
glass iron structure set atop the narrow passageway than historical writing. With this in mind, the method-
between dwellings. It was literally a street trans- ical indexing and cross-referencing of the citations
formed into an interior, selling products destined from hundreds of sources contains the potential for
for domestic interiors and the fashions that people a proto-electronic archive. It becomes possible to
wore while parading in public. The arcades were uncover the ‘primal history’ of nineteenth century
no longer fashionable by the time Benjamin arrived architecture that lay beneath narrative by unfolding
in Paris; many had been destroyed during the smaller variegated facets of the historical text.
Haussmann renovation. The structures had begun
to show the edges of ruination as an outmoded Media archaeologist of the arcades
form, just as media archaeology seeks out the dead Central to Benjamin’s mode of writing are his site-
ends of technological history.2 It was only a failed speciic diagrams outlined in ‘A Berlin Chronicle’.5
architecture that could become the object of study Benjamin’s encounter with architectural theory
for an historical materialist. of the early 1920s (Giedion, Moholy-Nagy, G
Magazine) sparked his interest in industrial archi-
Benjamin elaborated his concept of historical tecture, including how the structures appeared
materialism in his last work, ‘On the Concept of in photographs. The genesis for The Arcades
History’, explaining how it involves learning from Project was the literary work Le Paysan de Paris by
the tradition of the oppressed and the emergency Louis Aragon, and its mode of literary and graphic
situation that had become the rule.3 Benjamin’s montage.6 The book contained a photograph of
practice of historical materialism becomes a media the Passage de l’Opéra, one of the earliest glass-
archaeology activated through literary montage and covered passageways that had become the meeting
photo philosophy. He elaborated cues from a range place chosen by Aragon for the gatherings of Dada.
of architectural sources. Foremost, he redeploys Also inluential to Benjamin’s methods must have
18
Constellation of Awakening: Benjamin and Architecture | Spring / Summer 2016 | 91–108
92
been Karl Kraus’s satirical-literary techniques using no attention to architects or their buildings. Detlef
a détournement of quotations.7 Literary montage Mertins, in his essay ‘Walter Benjamin and the
transforms text into a medium closer to cinema, and Tectonic Unconscious’, discusses how Benjamin
maybe even to the weather, considering Benjamin’s changes Sigfried Giedion’s Building in France ‘into
frequent references to rain, sky, clouds, atmos- optical instruments for glimpsing a space inter-
pheres, auras, air, breath and breathing, gas lighting woven with unconsciousness’.10 Mertins downplays
and lightning storms. Giedion’s engagement with ilm and photography
already intrinsic to Building in France, designed
Benjamin’s writing takes a literary, autobiograph- by Moholy-Nagy, foremost ilm and photo theorist.
ical turn after he joins the editorial meetings of G Eve Blau has argued that Giedion’s use of images
magazine in 1923, and starts writing for newspa- (still and moving) in his publications explore ‘dura-
pers on a regular basis. He writes the irst drafts of tion and immanence’, and the images are relational
‘One-Way Street’ using sections of letters he had rather than determinate.11 Nevertheless, Benjamin’s
written in 1923, published in 1928.8 These experi- theory of the optical unconscious applied to tectonics
ments lead him to develop the revised method does evoke media archaeology as a nonhuman
of scholarly research that he undertakes in The world made visible. This can be seen most clearly
9
Arcades Project. What had begun as the usual in his preference for gas lighting, discussed further
routine of writing outlines and collecting research on. As will be made clear in the following discussion
materials eventually evolved into an archival of Benjamin’s photo philosophy, he never empha-
project. What distinguishes The Arcades Project is sised visuality for its own sake, since he had been
that the collections of quotations were longer and tutored by German artists who had absorbed Soviet
more extensive, and sorted under broader themes, Constructivism.12
than ever would be undertaken for a single book
project. He had become a future librarian of the Benjamin studied Building in France for its content
highly fragmented circulation of textual passages and imagery, yet most crucial was the design by
that half a century later has become the underlying which the information is presented. Similar to The
logic of the Internet. Without academic afiliation, Arcades Project, sections of Building in France make
Benjamin spent a good portion of his time in the use of long strings of direct quotations, introduced
library, an architecture of information and indexing as ‘instead of derivations, some voices from various
technologies. The Bibliothèque nationale in Paris moments of the period.’13 The entries resort to the
(1868) contained some the most innovative uses same type of punctuated language that Benjamin
of lightweight iron construction, combined with the favours in his choice of passages. For instance,
irst interior gas lighting and glass oculi. During long the encyclopaedic sounding ‘Henri LABROUSTE
hours of copying out notes, it is likely Benjamin (1801–75). Attempts for the irst time to combine
absorbed the technical systems of both the architec- engineer and architect in one person: architect-
ture and informational systems as methodological constructor.’14 Giedion adds very little analysis or
resources. commentary in much of the book, the exact method
that Benjamin decides to utilise for his own decade
Very few of the many publications about The long project. Building in France’s design relects the
Arcades Project focus upon architecture, perhaps functional clarity of the new architecture through a
because Benjamin sought to rework the traditional parallel information architecture, which Benjamin
schemes of architectural history, paying little or recognised.
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Never before was the criterion of the minimal so impor- from within architectural structures and infrastruc-
tant […] the minimal element of quantity: the ‘little’, the ture, rather than as simple representation, which
‘few.’ These are dimensions that were well established is the equivalent of the façade. Architectural media
in technological and architectural constructions long emerge from the glassed passageways in 1820, the
before literature made bold to adapt them. 15
same time period photography is invented and gas
lighting is irst introduced into interiors. Likewise, the
Benjamin was motivated to transform knowledge photographic exposure imparted to metal and stone
production generated by the printed book. ‘The is an animation of the material world that cinema
book is already an outdated mediation between two would further accelerate. ‘These stones were the
different iling systems’, he wrote.16 An archaeo- bread of my imagination’, Benjamin wrote in his
logical method is laid out in ‘A Berlin Chronicle’ essay on Marseilles, which aligned his thinking
(1931): ‘He must not be afraid to return again and more with primitive architecture than modernism.22
again to the same matter; to scatter it as one scat-
ters earth, to turn it over as one turns over soil. For Architects were writing books and publishing
17
the matter itself is only a stratum.’ These earthen magazines that brought together industrial
excavations were the ‘so many thousand printed structures and technical equipment through
characters run through the ingers’ every week at photographic layouts. Moholy-Nagy’s numerous
the library, the physical act of opening hundreds publications drew from Berlin Dada and De Stijl, as
of printed books to scavenge a few lines. ‘Rather well as from Le Corbusier’s graphic design created
than attempt a historical account of this process, for L’Esprit Nouveau.23 His irst book Buch Neuer
we would like to focus some scattered relections Künstler (1922) followed Le Corbusier’s method
on a small vignette which has been extracted from of juxtaposing machine technology with works of
the middle of the century (as from the middle of the art or design. In one illustration, the metal engi-
thick book that contains it)’.18 Other references to neering structures of a bridge is presented with
archaeology abound throughout the volume, such the Constructivist art of El Lissitsky.24 Photography
as methods for dislodging the episteme out of its and ilm were central to Giedion’s revised histor-
shell. ‘If the object of history is to be blasted out ical methods, while as an artist, Moholy-Nagy was
of the continuum of historical succession, that is engaged in making ilms from animated storyboards
19
because its monadological structure demands it.’ freely mixing graphic elements, photographs and
The practice of media archaeology often evokes text. [ig. 1]
the nonhuman, the point at which media itself are
capable of cutting loose epistemic objects.20 Benjamin’s encounter with Dada artists and
Bataille, known for their dictionary entries and
Benjamin’s reception of photography is crucial creation of encyclopaedias, may have led to his
21
to his engagement with Building in France. The development of the alphabetical ordering system.
ways Benjamin references photographs in The ‘The father of Surrealism was Dada; its mother
Arcades Project are linked directly into Giedion’s was an arcade.’25 ‘This work has to develop to
cache of images. Just as photography disrupted the the highest degree the art of citing without quota-
very terms of artistic engagement through its tech- tion marks. Its theory is intimately related to that of
nical character, a similar operational change was montage.’26 By adopting the cutting skills of the ilm
underway within architecture. Along these lines, The editor, Benjamin broke apart the older printed media,
Arcades Project explores the media that emerge making the text into an ‘image’ ready for swifter
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modes of search and retrieval. The Arcades Project All photographs did not hold the same value for
calibrates a new method of information retrieval Benjamin. He often quoted Brecht about how the
through an indexical code assigned to each block of information presented by photography can also
text that could then be cross-referenced. This shift mislead, and that this must be made explicit. ‘Reality
into paratextual devices and epigrams preigures proper has slipped into the functional. The reiica-
the linking of text via hypertext markup language tion of human relationships, the factory, let’s say, no
27
(html). These passages could potentially multiply longer reveals these relationships. Therefore some-
from their bound books, communicating automati- thing has actually to be constructed, something
cally without a human narrator. ‘How gratings – as artiicial, something set up.’33 Constructivist photog-
allegories – have their place in hell.’28 This liberated raphy is fully operational in Building in France. Most
lexicon orchestrates a media archaeology that has other photographs of the Eiffel Tower emphasise
only just begun to be realised on digital platforms, its height and placement in the landscape, while
what Proust intends with the experimental rear- Moholy-Nagy’s photographs in the book were taken
rangement of furniture.29 from within the structure, looking up from below into
the meshwork of multiple points and angles. This
The so-called ‘Exposés’ written as the sole presents a vertiginous volume of interpenetrating
commentary to The Arcades Project contain an lines that emphasise the tower’s capacity to transmit
outline for a media archaeological praxis. ‘The electrical signals (for radio and TV). [ig. 2]
historian today has only to erect a slender but
sturdy scaffolding – a philosophic structure – in Prefabricated parts assembled on site reduced
order to draw the most vital aspects of the past the labour and human interaction required. ‘Each
into his net.’30 Engels studies the tactics of barri- of the twelve thousand metal ittings, each of the
cade ighting; Benjamin appropriates architectural two and a half million rivets, is machined to the
theory to rework the Marxist tactics of historical millimetre […]. On this work site, […] thought reigns
materialism. He considered Alfred Gotthold Meyer’s over muscle power, which it transmits via cranes
tectonic theory published as Eisenbauten (iron and secure scaffolding.’34 Clearly the ironworks
constructions) in 1907 as a prototype for materi- that comprise its frame were crafted with more than
alist historiography. Meyer is critical of the Berlin functional requirements in mind, yet despite this
tectonic school inaugurated by Schinkel, which Gustave Eiffel stressed its engineering and scientiic
had sought to apply the same architectonics used uses. The optics develop less from the views seen
31
in stone and wood for iron construction. Benjamin from the actual structure than its constant pres-
refers repeatedly to Sigfried Giedion’s photo of Pont ence felt in every part of the city.35 It organises the
Transbordeur spanning the industrial harbour in way other urban architecture becomes visible, just
Marseilles, built by Ferdinand Amodin in 1905. In as the Paris arcades caused new passageways to
the steel supports of a transporter bridge, Benjamin open in the middle of the city. Prior to the construc-
identiies the thin net and streaming as its funda- tion of the arcades, no safe, sheltered pedestrian
mental qualities: ‘through the thin net of iron that walkway existed on the street.
hangs suspended in the air, things stream – ships,
ocean, houses, masts, landscape, harbour.’32 Moholy-Nagy also had been drawn into photog-
Similarly, indexical systems rather than chapters raphy by its technical-reproductive capacities,
opened passageways to be read more luidly. similar to the possibilities of a new architecture based
upon methods of fabrication. Much like Benjamin in
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Fig. 1: Dynamik der Gross-Stadt (Dynamic of the Metropolis), Laszlo Moholy-Nagy in Malerei, Fotografie, Film (1925),
122–137.
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‘A Short History of Photography’ and ‘The Work of the arcades presented a proto-cinema with its gas
Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility’, and overhead lighting.
Moholy-Nagy saw the limitations of photography
as the reproduction of innumerable images but The methods employed in producing The Arcades
36
without the capacity to reveal social conditions. Project were continuations of insights Benjamin had
His call for a new photography in his 1922 essay gained through writing and research. His discovery
‘Produktion-Reproduktion’ is now well-known: ‘we of the relaying of practice into theory was irst real-
must endeavour to expand the apparatus […] used ised through drawn diagrams. In ‘A Berlin Chronicle’
solely for purposes of reproduction for productive Benjamin asks some questions about his past,
purposes.’37 Moholy-Nagy’s productive aims share and answers become inscribed: ‘to open the fan of
the qualities that Benjamin ascribed to the optical memory never comes to the end of its segments,
unconscious, to expose social conditions that other- only in its folds does the truth reside, that image,
wise remained hidden. Benjamin quotes Brecht in that taste, that touch’.42 Automatic writing favoured
‘A Short History of Photography’, saying that the by the Surrealists played a part, yet Benjamin
present situation is ‘complicated by the fact that describes the use of diagrams to organise and even
less than at any time does a simple reproduction of produce the writing. He explains how he carried a
reality tell us anything about reality. A photograph sheet that contains a diagram drawn while sitting in
of the Krupp works or GEC yields almost nothing a café in Paris, eventually lost, but later the schema
38
about these institutions.’ The slave labour used was recalled while writing about Berlin. He writes a
by Krupp during World War II is now widely docu- chronicle of his life in Berlin through the diagram’s
mented through court testimony, a shocking exposé way-inding, much like his irst experimental writing.
compared with the large archive of company ‘One-Way Street’ is a compilation of urban sites
photographs that feature heroic steel armaments orchestrated with large title headings that read like
prepared for promotional purposes. advertisements, or diagrams.
In ‘Saturn’s Ring, Notes on Iron Construction’, Underground works: excavations in progress
the only essay on The Arcades Project prepared The diagram Benjamin describes is a series of
for publication, Benjamin emphasised outmoded branching trees, outlining a genealogy of his ideas
media: ‘The arcades are the scene of the irst gas as connections to other literary works (what would
lighting.’39 His sensibilities are made clear when he later be called intertextuality). The diagram brings
expresses regret over the changeover from gas together relations to other texts and interactions that
lamps to electric lights: ‘The old gas torches that then form passages, a method to transcribe events
burned in the open air often had a lame in the that merge memory, sensations and urban sites.
shape of a butterly, and were known accordingly as
papillons.’40 These butterly lights, the lame resem- Underplaying personal relationships in favour of
bling luttering wings, were demonstrated almost on nonhuman ones he notes, ‘the veil that gets covertly
command in the newspaper ofices in Citizen Kane.41 woven over our lives shows people less than the
Kane steps up onto a chair to adjust the brightness sites of our encounters’. Benjamin’s attention to the
of the gas lames as he examines the inal daily nonhuman contributed to his practice of historical
news proofs, a itting tribute to Walter Benjamin’s materialism in The Arcades Project in ways that also
own forays as a journalist and storyteller for radio. develop in his urban writing.43 He speaks of insights
Cinema was only made possible with electricity, yet appearing to him ‘with the force of illumination’. He
97
Fig. 2: Eiffel Tower with Lightning, 1900. Source: Wikimedia Commons
98
Fig. 3: Bibliothèque nationale, (Henri Labrouste 1868), photo: Georges Fessy.
99
Fig. 4: Interior 1, Plantings, State Library Kulturforum (Hans Scharoun), 2015, photo: author.
100
attributes the premise of sudden awakening to the liquid that Benjamin preferred to electrical lighting.
constellation of things that make their appearance A neon sign on the side of a building spelling out
on the streets of Paris, the walls and quays, the ‘Amour’ in red, illustrating neon in a book, shows
places he had paused, the collections and rubbish, how photography captures these atmospheric
the railings and the squares, the arcades and kiosks. effects. For Benjamin, sites are mapped through
Primary in this mode of writing was the importance his interaction with the media found on streets,
of entering into the low of events without explaining nonhuman worlds that only emerge through a wilful
how or why they happened. Benjamin uses the ‘letting go’ of human volition. These writing modali-
example of how Herodotus prefaces a story by ties Benjamin outlined as a diagram contribute to
noting that a very wonderful thing is said to have the marking out of sites as intensive encounters,
happened. 44
A well-known example is the story of which were erotically charged to varying degrees.
Arion the renowned harp player who was saved by
a dolphin after being forced by bandits to jump into To the public: please protect these new
the ocean. This was another way of supporting the plantings
marvellous of the everyday important to Surrealist The atmosphere of the surrounding environment
literary interventions. is frequently evoked in The Arcades Project, often
through Benjamin’s own immediate situation in
In ‘A Berlin Chronicle’, Benjamin’s recalls a architecture. In libraries for example, Benjamin
charged site: as a young man, he looked into the pursued his project beneath the ornamented
glass-enclosed bar at an Ice Palace owned by vaulting of the reading room of the Bibliothèque
his father. Although unable to speak with her, he nationale in Paris, and ‘the glassed-in spot’ facing
gazes at a woman dressed in a tight sailor suit. his seat at the Staatsbibliothek in Berlin: [igs. 3–4]
He describes the memory as an intense sexual
awakening of transgendered desire. In another These notes devoted to the Paris arcades were begun
instance, he has forgotten the address to the under an open sky of cloudless blue that arched
Synagogue or got lost on his way, yet feels with a above the foliage; millions of leaves, the breath of
great force the sudden liberation from family duty. the researcher, the storm, the idle wind of curiosity,
The scene is only remembered through the use of covered with the dust of centuries. For the painted sky
a diagram, an immense pleasure at letting things of summer that looks down from the arcades in the
take their course, and the process of transforming reading room of the Bibliothèque nationale in Paris
relations with his surroundings. ‘Diagrams must be has spread out over them its dreamy, unlit ceiling.47
conceived as Hammers and Songs.’45 This mode of
writing becomes a tool for excavating urban sites He asks, ‘What is “solved”? Do not all the ques-
through metal and stone structures (architecture) tions of our lives, as we live, remain behind us like
and signage (advertisements). Benjamin writes foliage obstructing our view?’48 The second loor of
in ‘One-Way Street’, ‘What makes advertisement Berlin’s State Library contains a large installation
superior to criticism? Not what the moving red neon of plants and trees. The ceiling is lined with large
says – but the iery pool relecting it in the asphalt.’46 skylights, ocular lenses shaped like the round pores
of plants, while a long glass wall extends along
Benjamin continually downplays language in the entire length of the library. It is a long building,
favour of affective images closer to cinema. Neon much like the ones Fourier had envisioned for social
lighting was invented in Paris with the irst neon housing. The interior contains an open plan space
signs appearing in 1910 produced by a gaseous with few barriers and open decks that loat above
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Fig. 5: Interior 1, Purple Haze, State Library Kulturforum (Hans Scharoun), 2015, photo: author.
102
the ground, illuminated from all directions. During crucial to German military rearmament. Benjamin
the day, natural light enters from the rows of ocular would have become aware by 1931 when the news
portals that cover the entire ceiling, and at dusk, the broke that Germany had been secretly remilita-
darkening purple sky presses its atmospheric light rising, organised through industrialists like Krupp
against the three storey glass wall. [ig. 5] who constructed Hitler’s war machine and ensured
his political power. It was begun as a strategy to
The aura that Benjamin deined was much vaster force the French and British national banks to end
than any surrounding a single work of art. It was the heavy debt burden imposed after the First
49
closer to an atmosphere. It was the organisation of World War, yet the tragic outcomes still reverberate
the senses in an urban corridor, a series of events today. During the Second World War the iron and
unfolding in the landscape, the far-off mountain steel industries would utilise prison labour from
range, mediated by passing clouds, the branch of a concentration camps, an extreme case of worker
tree. Glass architecture appears irst in a photomon- exploitation within capitalist production. Benjamin
tage, a medium that created luid relations between reveals his political project in The Arcades Project to
the older stone architecture and industrial mate- be class struggle that results in ecological devasta-
rials that appear as an environment. As for the new tion. ‘The later conception of [human] exploitation of
architecture, it appears like a storm in Mies van der nature re-enacts the actual exploitation of [humans]
Rohe’s Glass Skyscraper Project (1922), blowing by owners of the means of production. If the integra-
the wreckage of history into a single towering glass tion of the technological into social life failed, the
wedge. It rises on the skyline as climate, and reap- fault remains in this exploitation.’51
pears in 1950s midtown Manhattan generated by
capital lows related to the sale of luxury products, In The Arcades Project, the research is
the same immaterial systems of wealth that had concerned with the genealogy of tectonics. Housing
drawn Benjamin to study shopping arcades. ‘With reform in 1920s Berlin had produced a vast new
the destabilising of the market economy, we begin housing stock using long rows of prefabricated
to recognise the monuments of the bourgeoisie as buildings. The Siedlungs or housing estates,
ruins even before they have crumbled.’ Although
50
created during the Weimar Republic using new
Benjamin mostly certainly knew of Mies van der inancing schemes, had a close relation with
Rohe through both their associations with G maga- Fourier’s elongated communal structures, yet this
zine in Berlin in the 1920s, he never mentions the goes unmentioned.52 Instead, Benjamin notes that
architect or his work, yet does make references to locomotives required iron tracks, while the rail then
Le Corbusier’s urban writing, never his architecture. becomes the irst prefabricated iron component,
This is no doubt due to his deliberate neglect of the the precursor of the girder. He then notes, ‘iron is
so-called victors of traditional historical writing. avoided in home construction but used in arcades,
exhibition halls, train stations – buildings that serve
Benjamin’s choice of research subject during transitory purposes.’53 The sites were passage-
his exile follows the troubled Germany economy. ways, streets and bridges. Architecture becomes
By 1935, the German economy was geared solely luid as is suggested at numerous points in The
towards massive public works projects in order to Arcades Project, just as the liquidation of the interior
inance the printing of money to break free from took place during the last years of the nineteenth
its debt obligations. Benjamin chose the subject of century, in the work of Jugendstil.
iron construction, the same iron and steel works so
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The nearest stop to Benjamin and Hegel’s the latest high-speed digital cameras, even while
University of Berlin is Friedrichstrasse Station, the some of the freight trains passing through are from
stop prior to the Hauptbahnhof (Central Station). another era altogether.
The newer brick façade dates from 1950, but the
covering over the platform dates from 1927. The Revolutionary climatology
station requires walking down one level that contains
shops and cafes, and walking up again using an For over 100 years, anecdotal reports have appeared
escalator. Compared with the Hauptbahnhof, the in the scientiic literature describing brief luminous
roof is a heavier metal structure with pitched roof glows high above thunderstorms. They were given
and yellowing opaque panels of glass. Today, little more credence than UFO sightings until 1989,
travelling by train from Berlin Hauptbahnhof south when university researchers accidentally captured a
towards Frankfurt is to follow the route Benjamin ‘red sprite’ on a lowlight video camera. Red Lightning
travelled to the University of Frankfurt in 1928, in a Sprites are now known to licker like transient, phan-
inal attempt to ind support for his dissertation, and tasmagoric auroras in the mesosphere, at the very
to Paris in 1933, leeing Berlin. edge of space, whenever unusually powerful lightning
lashes within storms far below.55
Siegfried Giedion notes in Building in France, ‘the
artistic draperies and wall-hangings of the previous More than architecture, The Arcades Project reports
54
century have come to seem musty.’ Likewise, the on the weather. [ig. 6] Arcades share a genealogy
train platforms are covered by the rounded glass with planetariums, star-gazing architectures, and
ceilings that resemble curtains or woven textile. also with greenhouses. Scientists did not believe
The Hauptbahnhof is a new station with a wide Red Lightning Sprites existed, until it was registered
spanned glass ceiling that covers a four storey on infrared video. Meanwhile, the cause of lightning
shopping arcade. The plan for the modern arcades itself still remains a mystery. What is known is that
has expanded to include the train station platform lightning and all its related displays are intrinsic to
and shops, a common design feature in Berlin and the functioning of the earth’s weather systems, such
elsewhere in many cities. as rainfall and heat distribution. ‘Or Goethe: how he
managed to illuminate the weather in his meteor-
The glass shell roofs that now cover rail terminals ological studies, so that one is tempted to say he
no longer require structural supports, yet still use undertook this work solely in order to be able to
the small panes of glass in order to make a curved integrate even the weather into his waking, creative
expanse – large pieces of glass do not bend. Upon life.’56 The Arcades Project was written as a literary
arriving at the Hauptbahnhof platform, the wide way-inding system, in order to gain access to what
glass ceiling is a net stretching from one side of the Benjamin called the constellation of awakening.
large building to the other. It offers ‘a wide angle The Arcades Project presents an infernal archive, a
lens’ that allows a peering out at once to sides of the would-be guide and manual to generate dialectical
street and the full expanse of sky. A photo taken of images, to awaken from the internalised mytholo-
the glass canopy appears in the small rectangular gies of capitalism.
screen the size of a celluloid negative, while the
lifesize digital camera advertisement on the plat- Dialectical images cluster momentarily; the
form promotes the camera’s nonhuman eye. The subtractive powers of media evaporates language
sweeping glass arcade roof infrastructure matches in a hum of electrical impulses. Light/ning is the
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electriied plasma or neon tube lighting. Red Sprites how to construct a literary apparatus for producing
become a charged image of weather systems at new forms of knowledge. In his essay on Surrealism
the intersection of electrical and electro-magnetic Benjamin explicitly maps out the revolutionary
forces. ‘His nerves had become so sensitive to power of writers, and his intention to make use
atmospheric electricity that an approaching thun- of what he had learned from reading them.61 The
derstorm would send its signal over them as if over Arcades Project does open large passageways
electrical wires.’ 57
To watch a ilmed recording of into the future of the book. More than scholars, it
lightning seeking to make contact on the ground, it has been artists that have attempted to make new
extends what is called a stepped leader, or jagged work using the materials from The Arcades Project.
bolt that must connect with a similar line extending ‘Velocity, tactility, proximity – these were to be the
upward. On earth, the lightning frequency is approx- principles of a radical new criticism. “One-Way
imately 40–50 times a second or nearly 1.4 billion Street” made this plain with its own distinctly metro-
lashes per year. Taken together, a cosmic neuronal politan literary architectonics.’62 It was taken up with
system lashes into view for a brief second. the practice of détournement by the Situationist
International, announced in the inaugural journal
Other technical media, namely lighting and as the ‘integration of present or past artistic produc-
photography, activate the arcades as media tions into a superior construction of a milieu’.63 There
compared with the darkened enclosures of nine- has been at least one sustained effort to generate
teenth century interiors. The protected passageways a hypertext document using materials from The
provide shelter from inclement weather while the Arcades Project. In addition, a recently published
gas lighting and sunlight exhibit climatic conditions. nine hundred page book, Capital, claims to use
Benjamin’s own sensitivity to climate was evident. The Arcades Project as its model for unwinding the
‘Are we not touched by the same breath of air which twentieth century of New York City, covering many
was among that which came before?’58 In ‘On the of the same topics found in The Arcades Project. It
Concept of History’ Benjamin quotes Fourier, one of largely succeeds in becoming a literary vehicle that
the iconic igures of The Arcades Project: Benjamin had imagined for his own work.64
According to Fourier, a beneicent division of social The Arcades Project organises an urban
labor would have the following consequences: four archaeology of the recent past that began with the
moons would illuminate the night sky; ice would be photograph of an arcade, the Passage de l’ Opéra,
removed from the polar cap; saltwater from the sea before moving underground: ‘Nadar’s superiority
would no longer taste salty; and wild beasts would to his colleagues is shown by his attempt to take
enter into the service of human beings. All this illus- photographs in the Paris sewer system: for the
trates a labor which, far from exploiting nature, is irst time, the lens was deemed capable of making
instead capable of delivering creations. 59
discoveries.’65
In the ields with which we are concerned knowl- The charged revolutionary potential of the mass
edge exists only in lightning lashes. Sigrid Weigel actions planned for COP21 (the Paris Climate
elaborates upon how Benjamin’s lash of knowl- Conference) were intensiied by the terror attacks
edge operates in relation to text and image, or just two weeks prior, conirming Benjamin’s senti-
60
his concept of denkbild, or thought-image. The ment that the chaos of emergency events is the
connection between The Arcades Project and other rule. Climate change and globalised terror provide
writings suggests that Benjamin was testing out a backdrop for Benjamin’s own life as a refugee,
105
Fig. 6: Exterior 1, Test Patterns, Kulturforum (Hans Scharoun), 2015, photo: author.
106
living in Paris while working on The Arcades Project in The Arcades Project, ed. Rolf Tiedemann, trans.
(1933–40). Howard Eiland and Kevin McLaughlin (Cambridge,
MA: Belknap Press/ Harvard University Press, 2002),
Often the entries in The Arcades Project create 12. In his ‘On the Concept of History’, trans. Dennis
a continuum between materiality and technique. Redmond ([1940] 2005) Benjamin suggests this idea
The ring of Saturn becomes an iron railing, and the of an abrupt, violent and destructive revolt, possible at
painted foliage on the ceilings of the Bibliothèque any time, with incalculable consequences, accessed
nationale: ‘as one leafs through the pages down 30 January 2016, https://www.marxists.org/reference/
below, it rustles up above’, when the lightning lash archive/benjamin/1940/history.htm.
of dialectical imagery sends out its shock waves, 2. ‘Past media are not dead, but undead, principally to
the past is allowed to resurface into the present.66 be re-activated and thus in a radically present state of
Benjamin suggests that this way of knowing always latency’. See Wolfgang Ernst, ‘Media Method-Method
involves a ‘stillstehen’ or ‘zero-hour’: ‘The read and Machine’ (Lecture at Anglia Ruskin University,
image, by which is meant the image in the now Cambridge, 18 November, 2009), accessed 30
of recognizability, bears to the highest degree the January 2016, https://www.medienwissenschaft.
stamp of the critical, dangerous moment which is at huberlin.de /de/medienwissenschaft/medientheorien/
the basis of all reading.’67 ernst-in-english.
3. Benjamin, ‘On the Concept of History’.
This is how the architecture of the arcades func- 4. Sigfried Giedion, Building in France, Building in Iron,
tions in The Arcades Project, old media glowing Building in Ferro-Concrete, trans. J. Duncan Berry
from the interior of an empty mollusc shell, the (Santa Monica, CA: The Getty Center, [1929 ]1995).
natural allegory Benjamin often uses to describe 5. Walter Benjamin, ‘A Berlin Chronicle’, in Reflections:
nineteenth century interiors: ‘arcades dot the metro- Essays, Aphorisms, Autobiographical Writings, trans.
politan landscape like caves containing the fossil Edmund Jephcott (New York: Random House, 1995).
remains of a vanished monster: the consumer of 6. Louis Aragon, Paris Peasant, trans. and intro.
the pre-imperial era of capitalism, the last dinosaur Simon Watson Taylor (Boston: Exact Change,
68
of Europe’. 1994), appeared in installments in La Revue euro-
péenne before being published as a single text, Le
The text is the thunder rolling long afterwards. Paysan de Paris, in 1926. It comprises four sections:
‘Preface to a Modern Mythology’ (‘Préface à une
mythologie moderne’), ‘The Passage de l’Opéra’
Notes (‘Le Passage de l’opéra’), ‘A Feeling for Nature at
A warm thanks to Jean-Louis Cohen whose work irst the Buttes-Chaumont’ (‘Le Sentiment de la nature
inspired me to begin a research proposal about The aux Buttes-Chaumont’), and ‘The Peasant’s Dream’
Arcades Project. Thanks to Sanford, for his own hammer (‘Le Songe du paysan’) – the last was added for the
and songs. For Walter Benjamin, who cut the zig-zag path 1926 publication. Benjamin himself stated that Louis
through the center of my writing with Red Lightning, irst Aragon’s Le Paysan de Paris ‘stands […] at the very
the title that arrived just prior to a violent thunderstorm beginning’ of the Arcades research in ‘Benjamin, letter
while inishing the irst draft, and in the inal hour, to learn to Adorno (from Paris)’, 31 May, 1935, in Theodor
that Red Lightning is real. W. Adorno and Walter Benjamin: The Complete
Correspondence 1928–1940, ed. Henri Lonitz, trans.
1. Adolf Stahr, Zwei Monate in Paris, vol. 2, (Oldenburg, Nicholas Walker (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1999), 88.
1851):199, cited in Walter Benjamin, ‘Exposé of 1935’, 7. Walter Benjamin, ‘Karl Kraus’ in Selected Writings,
107
vol. 2, part 2, 1931–1934, (Cambridge, MA: Belknap denominates the nonhuman procedures which happen
Press/ Harvard University Press, [1931] 1999). in media themselves.’ See Ernst, ‘Media Method-
8. Walter Benjamin, ‘One-Way Street’ in One-Way Street Method and Machine’, accessed 30 January 2016,
and Other Writings, trans. J. A. Underwood (London: https://www.medienwissenschaft.huberlin.de /de/
Penguin Classics, 2009). An epistolary novel is written medienwissenschaft/medientheorien/ernst-in-english.
as a series of documents, usually letters, although 21. Benjamin, ‘A Short History of Photography’ (1931),
diary entries, newspaper clippings and other docu- trans. Stanley Mitchell, Screen (Spring 1972), 5–26.
ments are also included. Le Paysan de Paris draws 22. Benjamin, ‘Marseilles ‘(1929), in Reflections.
upon this mode of writing, and so does ‘One-Way 23. The arrival of Moholy-Nagy in Berlin, the third largest
Street’. city after New York and London, was part of the inter-
9. Graeme Gilloch, ‘Paris and the Arcades’ in Walter nationalisation of art and architecture that took place
Benjamin: Critical Constellations (Cambridge: Polity, after the First World War.
2002) provides a detailed overview of references 24. Laszlo Moholy-Nagy and Ludwig Kassák, Buch
that tie together The Arcades Project with Benjamin’s Neuer Künstler, (Zurich: Lars Müller, 1996). Originally
ongoing writing production. According to Gilloch, all of published in Vienna in 1922 as a propaganda piece
Benjamin’s writings from the autumn of 1927 until his for Constructivism in art, architecture, music, and
death in 1940 derive from research generated by The technology.
Arcades Project. 25. Benjamin, Arcades Project, 883.
10. Detlef Mertins, ‘Walter Benjamin and the Tectonic 26. Ibid., N1,10.
Unconscious: Using Architecture as an Optical 27. The paratextual has been deined as all that precedes
Instrument’ in The Optic of Walter Benjamin, ed. Alex the content of the book or prepares the reader to gain
Coles (London: Black Dog Publishing, 1999), 198. access to the information, such as titles, chapter titles,
11 Eve Blau, ‘Transparency and the Irreconcilable headings and subheadings, indexes.
Contradictions of Modernity’, Praxis 9 (2008), 52. 28. Benjamin, Arcades Project, C1,1.
12. Mertins claims that by linking decorative architecture 29. Ibid., 883.
to the mythologies of Capitalism, industrial architec- 30. Ibid., N1a,1.
ture to social revolution, Benjamin ‘radicalised and 31. A. G. Meyer, Eisenbauten (Esslingen, 1907), cited in
politicised social conlict’. This was also the basis of Benjamin, Arcades Project.
Soviet Constructivism that had been an active artistic 32. Giedion, Building in France, 7.
force in Berlin throughout the 1920s, often featured in 33. Benjamin, ‘Short History of Photography’, 24.
G magazine, and that then had become the reigning 34. Meyer, Eisenbauten, cited in Benjamin, Arcades
ideology at the Bauhaus. See Mertins, ‘Tectonic Project, F4a,2.
Unconscious’, 197–99. 35. Roland Barthes, ‘Eiffel Tower’ in A Barthes Reader, ed.
13. Giedion, Building in France, 94–97. Susan Sontag (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
14. Ibid., 94. 1982).
15. Benjamin, Arcades Project, F4a,2. 36. Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, ‘Space, Time and the
16. Benjamin, One Way Street, 60. Photographer’, in Moholy-Nagy, An Anthology, ed.
17. Benjamin, ‘Berlin Chronicle’, 314. Richard Kostelanetz (New York, Praeger, 1970).
18. ‘Ring of Saturn or Some Remarks on Iron Construction’ 37. Moholy-Nagy, ‘Production-Reproduction’, in Moholy-
(1928), in Benjamin, Arcades Project, 885. Nagy, ed. Krisztina Passuth (New York: Thames and
19. Benjamin, Arcades Project, N10,3. Hudson, 1985), 289–290.
20. ‘Media archaeology is both a research method in 38. Benjamin, ‘Short History of Photography’, 526. A
media studies, and an aesthetics in media arts […] it disturbing post-war testimony discloses how slave
108
labour from internment camps was used by the Krupp 56. Benjamin, Arcades Project, Dl,3.
industrial complex throughout the Second World War, 57. Dolf Sternberger, Panorama (Hamburg, 1938), cited in
accessed 30 January 2016, http://forum.axishistory Benjamin, Arcades Project, S9,3.
.com/viewtopic.php?t=64075. 58. Benjamin, ‘Concept of History’, II.
39. Walter Benjamin, ‘Paris, the Capital of the Nineteenth 59. Ibid., XI.
Century (1935)’ in Arcades Project, 3. 60. Sigrid Weigel, ‘The Flash of Knowledge and the
40. Benjamin, Arcades Project, T1a,6. Temporality of Images: Walter Benjamin’s Image-
41. Citizen Kane (1941), directed by and starring Orson Based Epistemology and Its Preconditions’ in Visual
Welles. Arts and Media History, Critical Inquiry 41, 2 (2015),
42. Benjamin, ‘Berlin Chronicle’, 6. 365.
43. Ibid., 30. 61. ‘Surrealism’ (1929) in Benjamin, One-Way Street.
44. Walter Benjamin, ‘The Storyteller’ in Selected Writings, 62. Gilloch, Walter Benjamin: Critical Constellations, 101.
Volume 3, 1935–1938 (Cambridge, MA: Belknap 63. For a deinition of détournement, see Situationist
Press/ Harvard University Press, 1999), 143–66, ‘Half International Online, http://www .cddc.vt.edu/sionline/
the art of storytelling [is] to keep a story free from si/deinitions.html.
explanation.’ 64. Kenneth Goldsmith, Capital, (New York:
45. Sanford Kwinter, ‘The Hammer and the Song’ Verso, 2015), accessed 30 January 2016,
in OASE Journal for Architecture, special issue http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2011/04/
Diagrams, no. 48 (1998), 31 accessed 30 January rewriting-walter-benjamins-the-arcades-project/.
2016, http://www.oasejournal.nl/en/Issues/48 / 65. Benjamin, ‘Paris, Capital (1935)’, in Arcades
TheHammerAndTheSong#031. Project, 6.
46. Benjamin, One Way Street, 59 66. Benjamin, Arcades Project, S3,3.
47. Benjamin, Arcades Project, Nl,5. 67. Ibid., N3,1.
48. Benjamin, One Way Street, 51. 68. Ibid., R2,3.
49. Walter Benjamin, ‘The Work of Art in the Age of
Mechanical Reproduction’ in Illuminations, trans. Biography
Harry Zohn (London: Collins/ Fontana, [1936] 1973). Sarah K. Stanley is a writer, editor and media consultant
50. Ibid., 13. based in Berlin and London working with international
51. Walter Benjamin, ‘Paris, Capital of the Nineteenth architects and artists since 2005. She studied art and
Century (1939)’ in Arcades Project, 17. architectural theory, media and politics at the Institute
52. Markus Jager, Housing Estates in the Berlin Modern of Fine Arts, Hunter College and Columbia University.
Style, ed. Jörg Haspel and Annemarie Jaeggi, (Munich Her recent publications include ‘Design Theory of
and Berlin: Deutscher Kunstverlag, 2007). Japanese Modernism’ in the journal Site (Sweden), and
53. Benjamin, ‘Paris, Capital (1935)’, in Arcades ‘The Philosophy of Photography’ in a book published by
Project, 4. Saarland Museum (Germany).
54. Giedion, Building in France, 3.
55. Walter A. Lyons, et al., ‘The Hundred Year Hunt for the
Sprite’, Eos 81, no. 33, (August 15, 2000), 373–377.
I was curious whether Red Lightning actually existed,
and that is how I found out that it is only a recent
discovery based on an accident with an infrared video
camera that captured a lash while engaged in another
experiment.
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