Dance of the Kangaroos (The Riot shall not be Televised) is a
collection of 42 poems on the socio-political and economic realities of
a people polarised by bitter colonial experiences. Through the use of
metaphor and other literary devices, closely knitted by an apprehensive
sense of a first witness, the poems highlight experiences of oppression,
marginalization, social justice and human rights abuse. Dance of the
Kangaroos takes the reader on a journey that unveils the realities and
challenges of postcolonial African society. It is one where the superior
class have taken up the colonial whip and induced their subordinates to
re-stage a colonial parody under indigénat, a policy used by the French
in colonial Africa. Mbutoh draws on words and expressions from his
African background and his knowledge of his people's colonial
experiences to make each poem unique.