RT Article T1 Watching Movies in Jonestown: A Cultural Interlocutor Approach to Visual Media and New Religions JF Journal of religion and popular culture VO 34 IS 1 SP 53 OP 72 A1 Klippenstein, Kristian LA English YR 2022 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1793883963 AB This article argues that new religious movements (NRMs) develop as cultural interlocutors. As emergent social bodies that respond to extant norms, structures, and values, NRMs can deploy cultural products as a shared vocabulary and grammar in their response to surrounding society. To demonstrate this approach's ability to parse NRMs' relations to popular culture while highlighting organizationally distinctive dimensions of such interactions, this article examines Jim Jones's references to visual media shown in Jonestown in 1978. Jones critiqued movies and television as tools of social control, repurposed documentaries and films as evidence to support his proffered doctrine, and creatively presented movies as analogues of the commune's perceived challenges. This threefold hermeneutic shaped the Peoples Temple's beliefs and behavior, as well as its own media productions. K1 Peoples Temple K1 Movies K1 movie watching K1 Media Studies K1 Jonestown K1 Jim Jones K1 film analysis K1 culture as language