English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From ideologize +‎ -er.

Noun edit

ideologizer (plural ideologizers)

  1. One who ideologizes.
    • 1971, Joseph Rogers Hollingsworth, Nation and State Building in America: Comparative Historical Perspectives:
      What this often means, indeed, as once again the Australian experience illustrates, is a positive distrust of the intellectual, the ideologizer.
    • 2015, Michael Mewshaw, Sympathy for the Devil:
      In fact, at the age of fifty-three, Pasolini might well have been Gore's doppelgänger, and what Italo Calvino had written about Pasolini could have applied to Vidal as well: he was “the ideologizer of eros and the eroticizer of ideology.”