Citations:agnotology


 * 2019, Negar Mottahedeh, Whisper Tapes: Kate Millett in Iran, Stanford University Press (ISBN 9781503610156), page 10:
 * The culturally induced agnotology on Iran was constitutive. Referred to as unknowledge to distinguish it from pure ignorance, agnotology denotes a socially constructed lack of knowledge. The West-oriented Shah had constructed and perpetuated a discourse on Iran [...that...] had little basis in the lived reality of Itan, and the constructed unknowledge that was perpetuated around it was meant to bolster the Shah's power in the world [...]. Confronting Millett was a secondary layer of agnotology, the absence of any socially pertinent knowledge of Iran's Shi'i culture.


 * 2016, Nora Stel, "The agnotology of eviction in south Lebanon&#39;s Palestinian gatherings", in Antipode (48, 1400–1419)


 * 2020, The Art History Babes, The Honest Art Dictionary: A Jovial Trip Through Art Jargon, White Lion Publishing (ISBN 9780711248823), page 21:
 * Now, in no way does that mean this [the tobacco industry spreading doubt and ignorance about the dangers of smoking] was the first instance of agnotology on a large scale—really it had been around for centuries as a political tool. Maps are perfect examples of agnotology in action. When mapmakers of the past were filling in uncharted territory, they made up information to enforce certain assertions