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===Popular culture and news media=== {{Main|New religious movements and cults in popular culture}} New religious movements and cults have appeared as themes or subjects in literature and popular culture, while notable representatives of such groups have produced a large body of literary works. Beginning in the 1700s authors in the English-speaking world began introducing members of "cults" as [[antagonists]]. In the twentieth century, concern for the rights and feelings of religious minorities led authors to most often invent fictional cults for their villains to be members of.<ref>Ed Brubaker, Fatale #21, 2014, Image, pp. 20β21</ref> Fictional cults continue to be popular in film, television, and gaming in the same way, while some popular works treat new religious movements in a serious manner. An article on the categorization of new religious movements in US print media published by ''The Association for the Sociology of Religion'' (formerly the American ''Catholic Sociological Society''), criticizes the print media for failing to recognize social-scientific efforts in the area of new religious movements, and its tendency to use popular or anti-cultist definitions rather than social-scientific insight, and asserts that "The failure of the print media to recognize social-scientific efforts in the area of religious movement organizations impels us to add yet another failing mark to the media report card Weiss (1985) has constructed to assess the media's reporting of the social sciences."<ref>van Driel, Barend, and James T. Richardson. "Research Note Categorization of New Religious Movements in American Print Media". ''Sociological Analysis'' 1988, 49, 2:171β183</ref>
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