City Planners Poem Analysis

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How do the two poets Boey Kim Cheng and Margaret Atwood use language to portray their attitude towards destruction of nature in the poems “the planners and “the city planners” respectively? “The planners” by Boey Kim Cheng talks about the rapid industrialization taking place in his city. It talks about how the planners have created a façade of a perfect city which however has hidden flaws. On the other hand, “The city planners” by Margaret Atwood talks about how unhappy the poet is with the sanities of her town. The planners are obsessed with order and are trying to build a perfect city while destroying the natural beauty of the town. The poet does not want to associate himself with the planners and hence refers to them as “they” and does …show more content…

This explains how the destruction that is going on will not stop giving a sense of hopelessness. It also shows how the planners have “drilled through the fossils” which means that they are destroying our connection with the past. In “the city planners” Margret Atwood talks about how unhappy she is about how similar and artificial everything in her town looks artificial and similar. She uses this poem to communicate how nature has been destroyed in order to make way for industrialization. She begins the poem with “what offends us is the sanities” which shows how unhappy she is with her town now that it lacks creativity. Margaret is annoyed with the uniformity around the city. She says, “What offends us is the sanities.” Which shows how unhappy she is that her town and how the town now lacks creativity. This continues to emphasize the similarity between everything in the city. Margret feels offended by the uniformity she sees in the city. She is also frustrated by the fact that the people living in the city are accepting the uniform structures of their

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