Chinweizu started teaching overseas, at MIT and
San Jose State University. He had returned to Nigeria by the early 1980s, working over the years as a
columnist for various newspapers in the country and also working to promote
Black orientalism in Pan-Africanism. In Nigeria, he became a literary critic, attacking what he saw as the elitism of some Nigerian authors, particularly
Wole Soyinka, and he was editor of the Nigerian literary magazine,
Okike. in which he discusses
gender roles,
masculinity and
feminism. Chinweizu has argued that the
Arab colonization and Islamization of Africa is no different from European imperialism. The violent conquests, forced conversions and slavery perpetrated by European Christians were also perpetrated by Arab Muslims. In fact, the
colonization and enslavement of Africa by Arabs began before the Europeans and continues to this day in
Sudan,
Mauritania and other countries in the
Sahel region. Recently he published a comparative digest that shows the parallel history of European and Arab atrocities against indigenous Africans. He has been critical of the popular illusion that Islam is free of slavery and racism.
Islam and
Arabian culture are just as much foreign invasive forces as
Christianity and European culture. ==Selected bibliography==