From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishagitpropa‧git‧prop /ˌædʒətˈprɒp $ -ˈprɑːp/ noun [uncountable] PPPAmusic, literature, or art that tries to persuade people to follow a particular set of political ideas
Examples from the Corpus
agitprop• Such clever agitprop worked well enough to get Clinton elected, but not well enough to make the programs work.• We went in for agitprop caricature and grotesque exaggeration.• They further confused the tone of a piece that had about it the whiff of 1970s radical agitprop.Origin agitprop (1900-2000) Russian “office of agitation and propaganda”, from agitatsiya “agitation” + propaganda