Recent Examples on the Web

The obscurantism isn’t confined to talking heads and detached national politicians, either. Tobias Hoonhout, National Review, "Talking Heads Finally Accept Reality of Riots — Only to Pin Blame on White Nationalists and Russians," 3 Sep. 2020

Peters seemed to others to be a genius at two things: mimicking the verbal pretentiousness and obscurantism of academic parlance and sweeping naïve young women off their feet by means of an alchemy that remained mysterious to everyone else. New York Times, "How a Fake Priest Duped Oxford and a World-Famous Historian," 14 Feb. 2020

Some early reviewers of The Second Sleep, which was published in the U.K. at the start of September, gave the impression that Harris had issued a rather straightforward warning against the threat of religious obscurantism and fanaticism. John Wilson, National Review, "A Post-Apocalyptic Tale with a Twist," 5 Dec. 2019

The secular Republic—as defended by Sarkozy, Hollande, and then Valls, along with numerous intellectuals and editorial writers—conveniently united the fight against Islamist obscurantism in France with that in Afghanistan. Rony Brauman, Harper's magazine, "Salable Virtues," 10 Apr. 2019

Some of his ire is justified—there is a lot of obscurantism in the world—but most works to bypass rather than engage. Samuel Moyn, The New Republic, "Hype for the Best," 19 Mar. 2018

This started to take effect even before the Internet took off, on account of crate-digging, esotericism and obscurantism, and the burgeoning reissue industry. Bruce Sterling, WIRED, "Musica Globalista: the farewell essay by Simon Reynolds, ‘Here Comes Everything’," 2 Sep. 2011

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'obscurantism.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.