2025 is poised to be another colossal year for travel and tourism and many of those trips will include travel professionals such as advisors and suppliers and traversing the globe to meet and share ideas and insights.
20.12.2024 - 05:19 / nytimes.com
When Helga Crane, the main character in Nella Larsen’s novel “Quicksand,” walked through the streets of Copenhagen, people were amazed. “Her dark, alien appearance was to most people an astonishment,” wrote Larsen, an acclaimed Harlem Renaissance author. “Some stared surreptitiously, some openly, and some stopped dead in front of her in order more fully to profit by their stares.”
More than 90 years after the publication of “Quicksand,” Larsen’s 1928 novel about a mixed-race woman’s unsuccessful journey to find her place in the world, a Black person might not receive a second glance exploring the Danish capital, which has seen a marked rise in the number of immigrants, including from Africa and the Middle East. While some things have changed drastically, many of the sights that Larsen’s fictional Helga Crane came across in Copenhagen remain much the same.
The cyclists crisscrossing the city are as ubiquitous today as they were when Helga learned to dodge the “innumerable bicycles like a true Copenhagener,” as is the city’s striking and colorful architecture. (UNESCO named it the World Capital of Architecture in 2023.) Denmark has often been ranked among the happiest countries in the world.
Larsen never explicitly wrote about her own day-to-day activities in Copenhagen. But biographers and critics have long regarded “Quicksand” as a semi-autobiographical work. That view was reinforced by revelations about Larsen’s life in Denmark. One of Larsen’s biographers, George Hutchinson, uncovered a passenger manifest that recorded Larsen’s travel from Denmark, and a Danish genealogist, Shari Jensen, discovered that Larsen’s relatives lived in Copenhagen at the same address as the relatives of the fictional Helga.
The novelist, born to immigrant parents, Mary Hanson, from Denmark, and Peter Walker, from the Danish West Indies, had lived in a working-class neighborhood in Chicago. Her mother later remarried a white Dane, and Larsen was raised in a white Danish household in Chicago, a rapidly growing and increasingly segregated city. Larsen spent years in Denmark as a child and then as a teenager and young adult. In 1912, she returned to the United States and later wrote “Quicksand,” her first novel, with its middle section devoted to Copenhagen. Published by the respected Alfred A. Knopf publishing house in 1928, the book was widely reviewed, including in The New York Times. W.E.B. DuBois, the sociologist and leading Black activist of the Harlem Renaissance era, praised it as “a fine, thoughtful and courageous piece of work.”
2025 is poised to be another colossal year for travel and tourism and many of those trips will include travel professionals such as advisors and suppliers and traversing the globe to meet and share ideas and insights.
INRIX, Inc., a prominent transportation data and analytics company, has just released its 2024 Global Traffic Scorecard, which analyzed and ranked congestion and commuting patterns in nearly 1,000 cities across 37 nations around the world. The results indicate that traffic congestion has surged across major cities as workers return to offices and weekend activities increase.
Although U.S. citizens primarily use Global Entry to get expedited entry back into the U.S. from abroad, travelers can also use it for expedited entry benefits in limited countries.
The Department of Transportation said on Friday that it will fine JetBlue $2 million over chronic delays, accusing the airline of publishing unrealistic schedules that it knows it can't actually achieve.
JetBlue Airways will pay the first-ever penalty for delayed and cancelled flights. The New York-based airline was recently placed under an investigation by the Department of Transportation over flights that were «chronically delayed» at least 145 times between June 2022 and November 2023. The agency says it provided warnings to JetBlue about the delays, which occurred over five months, however the flight schedule continued, despite the repeated delays. As a result of the investigation, the government fined JetBlue $2 million. “Illegal chronic flight delays make flying unreliable for travelers,” U.S.
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