Gene Moore Leads Yale Travel Tour of Holland & Belgium Next Spring

Here’s a great trip sponsored by Yale Travel, featuring our very own Professor Gene Moore, who has been a professor of literature in Amsterdam for 3 decades. You’ll get a cabin aboard the Magnifique II, a luxury river “barge” sporting only 18 cabins. You’ll start in Bruges and cruise to Amsterdam, with stops and time to explore in Ghent, Antwerp, Dortdrecht, Vianen and Amsterdam; meals and excursions included. Read the brochure for details. And see the letter from Gene below the brochure.

Yale Travel tells me that they are giving Yalies “first dibs” on tickets through December 15th. After that, if there are any tickets left, other Ivy travel groups will be allowed to purchase tickets. So, check this out and sign up soon.

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A Letter From Gene Moore

November 2017

Dear Classmates,

“As everyone knows, water and meditation are wedded forever,” according to Melville’s Ishmael in the opening chapter of Moby-Dick.

As someone who has lived in Amsterdam for 35 years, and now sits contemplating the November skies reflected in the wrinkled avocado-colored waters of a canal, I can assure you that a week on the waters of the Low Countries provides a unique opportunity to explore the meditative potential of water. You needn’t go whaling to discover and satisfy the need that makes Ishmael so restless; you can float along the winding waterways between Bruges and Amsterdam on a luxurious barge, with picturesque side-trips by bicycle or on foot to quiet places where motor vehicles have little or no access.

Holland is literally built on water. One-fifth of the surface of the Netherlands is water, another fourth lies below sea level, and only five percent of the dry land is higher than one meter above the sea. Schiphol Airport is built on an immense dry lake-bed, on runways four meters below sea level. From the tour barge you can gaze down upon cows grazing in green fields several meters below your own water level, and admire the windmills and houseboats and tulip fields and abundant greenery and bird-life along the shores.

Bikes In Amsterdam

The land of Holland is also uniquely built from the water, from systems of dikes and polders developed since the Middle Ages, by means of which flooded and low-lying areas have been reclaimed from the sea and turned into productive farmlands. Despite its size, the Netherlands is now the world’s second largest exporter of agricultural products (after the U.S.), exporting more than $92 billion in agricultural products in 2015, including more than half of the world’s trade in flowers and plants. Rotterdam is Europe’s largest harbor. The Dutch are justly proud of the maintenance of their infrastructure and their lifestyle, and it is entirely fitting that their national motto should be Je maintiendrai – “I shall maintain.”

The Netherlands also have one of the highest population densities in the world, at 412 people per square kilometer, or 507 if one doesn’t include the water (as against only 33 for the U.S.). Compared with countries of equal or larger populations, the density is higher only in Bangladesh, South Korea, and Taiwan. And yet, as we glide through green farmlands and pasture-lands between rows of neatly planted willows and poplars, you would never have the impression that this was a crowded country.

Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Holland is currently the sixth happiest country in the world, according to the World Happiness Report compiled annually by the United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network, based on factors such as GDP per capita, social support, “trust,” “healthy life expectancy,” and “freedom to make life choices.” By these measures, the U.S. currently ranks 14th (and Belgium 17th) out of 155 countries. I was very happy to discover this, especially until a Dutch friend informed me that the model for measuring happiness was developed by a Dutch professor in Rotterdam.After completing a B.A. in English at Yale, I studied comparative literature (French and German) in graduate school and taught English and American literature here at the Universiteit van Amsterdam from 1985 to 2013, with literary modernism as a specialty and a particular focus on the works of Joseph Conrad. My wife Krisztina arrived in Amsterdam in 2005 and teaches cultural history and nationalism in the Department of European Studies. Her latest book, Staging the Nation: Nationalism and Opera in Nineteenth-Century Hungary, is scheduled for publication in April.

We would be delighted to meet you here for a green and restful tour, and to share with you our experience of this fascinating and beautiful country. To learn more, visit the Yale Educational Travel website: www.yaleedtravel.org/holland18 or call 203-432-1952 or email edtravel@yale.edu.

With best wishes,

Gene Moore ‘69

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