"The City Planners" is a poem written by Margaret Atwood.
The poem's central theme is the destruction of natural resources and landscapes to make room for real estate development. The poem is critical of urbanization at the expense of nature's depletion.
The title itself is a commentary on the expansion of the city. Humans "plan" to create infrastructures—which is supposed to show our civilization's sophistication and advanced technology—and yet these same developers and government officials do not make any plans for natural regeneration to offset the negative effects of urbanization.
The word "planners" in the title also conveys a sense of malice. In the poem's context, the word "planner" can be read as "plotters" who plot to destroy the natural landscape of the country to make way for industrialization.
"The City Planners" is not only a criticism of architectural uniformity and urbanization, it is also Atwood's ode to nature.
https://www.cieliterature.com/the-city-planners/
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
What implications are in the title of "City Planners"?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
What is the theme of the chapter Lead?
Primo Levi's complex probing of the Holocaust, including his survival of Auschwitz and pre- and post-war life, is organized around indiv...
-
The statement "Development policy needs to be about poor people, not just poor countries," carries a lot of baggage. Let's dis...
-
"Mistaken Identity" is an amusing anecdote recounted by the famous author Mark Twain about an experience he once had while traveli...
-
Primo Levi's complex probing of the Holocaust, including his survival of Auschwitz and pre- and post-war life, is organized around indiv...
-
De Gouges's Declaration of the Rights of Woman was enormously influential. We can see its influences on early English feminist Mary Woll...
-
As if Hamlet were not obsessed enough with death, his uncovering of the skull of Yorick, the court jester from his youth, really sets him of...
-
In both "Volar" and "A Wall of Fire Rising," the characters are impacted by their environments, and this is indeed refle...
No comments:
Post a Comment