The Planners -
Boey Kim Cheng
Summary: The poet addresses his unhappiness and anger at the rapid urbanization
all around. He realizes the only people to blame are the real estate planners
whose only objective is to make money.
The
poet talks about progress, and how they can be boring in the sense that we
organize everything so neatly and that there is no more mystery left in the
world.
Structure
level analysis
1. There
is no indentation at all and every line start at exactly the same area. You
could draw a line through the beginning to use as a backing and all would
remain in line. This could exemplify the accuracy, the level of perfection that
we find in progress. One could argue it also deals with the boredom of having
the same thing structure in the same way, thinking that it is ‘perfect’ and
cannot be improved anymore, similar to how every building in a city looks more
or less the same while every tree in the forest are all differently structured.
2. Free
verse: gives a sense of irony in the “mathematically designed” city in which no
creation is actually ‘free’ to express ideas.
a. This
could have been used by the poet as a form of rebellion over conformity.
b. Alternatively
he could have been addressing the issue of a small case of rebellion over
robotic and repetitive thinking every single day, and to show that there is
still a sense of originality and people who have not given up. And they are
hiding in places where you least expect it, in the fabric of the poem itself.
Word
level analysis
1. Throughout
the whole text, we can find a repetition of the word “They", all
put in capitals, which can illustrate the fact that it is a title rather than
referring to a selective group of people. Rather throughout the poem the poet is
talking about the same group of people.
a. He
could be referring in this way the multinational companies and conglomerates
that run the world. They are the ones that spur on progress. “They
plan. They build…”
b. On
the other hand he could be using personification to refer to progress as an
entity itself that changes the way we see our world, our city in a way that
helps them develop.
2. Note
the technical terms found in the first few lines of the poem. “All spaces
are gridded, filled withpermutations of possibilities. The buildings are in alignment with the roads which meet at
desiredpoints linked by bridges all hang”. These indicate the fact that the
thought of progress is already so ingrained into the minds of society (and
already ingrained into our vocabulary) that it is already in our instinct to
progress and no longer a choice.
3. We
can also see another form of personification towards the end of the stanza.
“Even
the sea draws back
and the sky surrenders”
and the sky surrenders”
This
implies that even nature fears the course of progress and is retreating to give
way to allow these things to happen. It also exemplifies the fact that even
nature sees progress as something being more powerful than it, which is an
unprecedented event.
On
the other hand, the poet can be dealing with the problems of environmental
degradation that comes with development and how development always comes at a
price to the environment. We always find cases of illegal logging or
deforestation, and the waters being polluted with litter. He can be giving
nature human attributes so that we can empathize with them more easily, and
perhaps make us realize that development always has a cost.
4. The
first three lines of the second stanza emphasize on the perfection of progress.
“They
erase the flaws,
The
blemishes of the past, knock off
Useless
blocks with dental dexterity”
The
first line already describes perfection itself – a lack of flaws.
Any
imperfections of the past, we knock off.
We
get rid of anything useless, indicating maximum efficiency with the new world
of progress, withdental dexterity. When
we usually think of dentists, we usually think of how everything is sterile,
how the dentist is always so calm and collected and how everything he does is
completely exact and accurate, which is the implication of the poet at this
time. He wants us to note that correction that we make that is caused by the
past is knocked away perfectly, never a wasted movement.
5. “The
country wears perfect rows of shining teeth”, of course the poet here is
talking about the buildings, and how they are constructed in perfect rows, with
the very slight variations in height and structure making it look as if the
city has teeth. It is perhaps in this sense that the poet is bringing us back
to a day with the dentist, and how movement is perfect from him. The use of the
word “teeth” that is a
animal attribute gives the implication that the city is a physical entity and
is alive, contrary to the way we perceive it. The fact that they are shining
teeth also exaggerates the perfection of progress.
6. “Anesthesia,
amnesia, hypnosis. They have the means. They have it all so it will not hurt.”
Note
the power of three happening here.
a. Also
not how they are all terms used to fooling the brain into doing something that
it was not originally planned to do. It is here that the poet tries to make us
wonder ‘is progress making us think differently? Is it changing the way we view
the world as? Have we begun to become too soft, or too unused to the natural
world or a world without progress?’ I find that not doing homework for a day is
painful, perhaps this is one of the things I should question ‘is this feeling
normal? Or the work of progress?’ Not how the syntax of the sentence and the
use of the word “they” make it look as if you are about to undergo a life
changing procedure and they are telling you not to worry, when in fact you
really should.
b. On
the other hand, it can make us wonder ‘is it normal to not take these things at all? What is
wrong with being a little bit human? Is there a drug for everything that we
have? And if so, what is it then that makes us what we are if not for our
flaws? This question as addressed by Blur in their work entitled The Universal, where there was
a drug for feeling that you had and it made you wonder ‘isn’t it normal to have
these feelings?’ at that point in time it was very normal to take
anti-depressants to make you feel happy, or to take painkillers when you felt
physically pained. Aren’t these feelings what make us human? What are we then,
if not for the emotions and feelings that we have?
c. Alternatively,
the words mentioned (Amaesthesia, amnesia and hypnosis) form images connected
to plastic surgery, and therefore the re-modelling of one’s aspects. Hypnosis
also suggesting manipulation of one’s thoughts to create this “seemingly”
perfect world. It could also deal with the fact that although we consider these
things to be perfect, they are not real at all and that in reality it is
impossible to be perfect. It is these imperfections that make us who we are.
7. “The
piling will not stop.
The drilling goes right through
the fossils of last century”
The drilling goes right through
the fossils of last century”
It
is here that the poet is once again trying to reinforce the fact that progress
is already so ingrained into our heads that we cannot help but continue to
progress. It will keep going no matter what, giving perhaps a sense of
hopelessness and inevitability and a lack of control over what we observe.
Note
that it says “goes right through the fossils of last century”. Fossils
are the only thing we have left that connects us to the past and the fact that
we are drilling right through them destroys them. He is perhaps saying that
progress has destroyed our interpretation of the past as we try as much as we
can now to look more into the future. How many times do we know or predict more
about the future than look back at its past? The poet here tries to point out
the fact that when we look to the future, we must never forget to look back on
the past as well, so that we don’t repeat the same mistakes twice.
8. “But
my heart would not bleed
poetry.
Not a single drop
to stain the blueprint
of our past’s tomorrow”
to stain the blueprint
of our past’s tomorrow”
It
is here that the author says ‘hey maybe development and progress isn’t a bad
thing. And even if I felt it was I would keep my actions to myself, because I
wouldn’t do anything to stop it’. Take note that a blueprint has already been
set up for the future, indicating that we already have a plan. The author says
that he would do nothing to stain that blueprint to mess up the measurements of
any of the plans. His heart would not bleed poetry, something regarded as a
work of art, something that we do not really think about in progress, where
most of the work we find is left brained.
Lastly,
the two words “past’s tomorrow” is
an oxymoron and it is used to exemplify the fact that ‘we are already living in
the future, and what you do already determines the future – the future is in
your hands and I would do nothing to change it.’ Perhaps here the poet is saying
that he will do nothing to change and that ‘we should be the change we want to
see in the world’.
9. Juxtaposition
in the line “grace of mathematics” where grace moves freely, in
unrestrained strings, yet mathematics is made up of rules and straight,
unrestricted lines.
Speaker
of the poem: The writer himself, a victim (or a fortunate person) to be able to
witness progress in front of his eyes, Boey Kim Cheng.
Speaker’s
attitude toward the subject of the poem: Sitting on the fence, conservative, not taking sides, saying
things as they are in his opinion, although not at all biased.
Paired
poems (Identify poems in the anthology and why they are appropriate to be
paired)
1. The
City Planners towards the end
as she addresses the conspirators of the City Planners, similar to how the poet
in The Planners addresses the unknown plans of
progress, or the multinational companies that spur progress “They”
Memorable
lines
1. “They plan, they build. All spaces
are gridded.”
2. “The sea draws back and the skies
surrender.”
3. “Anaesthesia, amnesia, hypnosis’’
4. “Not a single drop to stain the
blueprint of our past’s tomorrow”
The Planners By Boey Kim Cheng
1) The poet’s says that the planners only sketch plan
and build all spaces available. He talks about urban space being part of a
major grid, which simply grows in dimension with no regards for the past.
2) He says that their plans have no uniqueness or
ingenuity and are the result of certain predetermined combinations.
3) The poet further reveals his disgust ate the
alignment and perfection the planners hope to achieve by connecting all spaces
with roads.
4) He talks about his observance of the road that is
linked at points that benefit the planners and are designed by them.
5) Cheng also talks about different urban spaces being
linked by bridges that seem to be suspended.
6) According to the poet the numbers and angles that
these bridges link all urbanized areas are the result of calculated
mathematics.
7) Cheng makes a very profound statement by saying
that builders and planners know only how to spin money from real estate and
will stop at nothing.
8)Ironically he expresses disapproval of the fact that
even nature seems to be at their mercy. The poet believes that in their
aspirations to make more money
they push they sea back and claim land.

9) He also hints at tall skyscrapers that seem to make
the skies surrender
10) In the second stanza Cheng compares the planners
to dentist. With a tinge of sarcasm he says that they seem to be on a mission
to destroy heritage and the past as if those structures are flaws in their way.
11) Continuing with sarcasm he refers to unique
ancient structures as blemishes or scars that the planners aim at knocking off.
12) The poet believes that they have to power the
equipment and the means to get rid of older structures as useless blocks or
rather teeth that a dentist would remove with precision.
13) He says that planners are very well equipped to
insure that oppositions and comparisons that form gaps in their progress are
done away with
14) He compares the modern building material to
gleaming gold keeping up with his sarcasm and hinting out the planners who use
these materials to replace heritage structures.
15-16) He takes his comparison of the planners with
the dentist further by referring to modern structures in cities as rows of
teeth that gleam and shine devoid of any ingenuity.
17) Cheng lists three very strong words to describe
the effect he thinks the planners have on common people. he says that the
common man does not oppose this rapid urbanization because he seems to be
hypnotized by the show of wealth and prosperity along the same line he talks
about innocent investors being injected with anaesthetics and suffering from
loss of memory
18) Once again with a profound statement Cheng says
that the planners have all the means to continue doing what they are.
19) He says that they have the power to insure that
people will not be affected by what they do
20) Cheng also believes that these people internet to
rewrite history
21) He believes that their greed and ambitious nature
will never cease
22-23) ironically he compares them to archaeologists
who drill not to recover ancient wealth but destroy the reminisce of the past
century
24-25-26-27) finally using irony and metaphorical
connotation Cheng reveals that considering the state of thing he would not moan
or write poetry for the loss of heritage. He believes that doing so would stain
the presence.
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