“Cult shares an origin with culture and cultivate — from the Latin cultus, a noun with meanings ranging from ‘tilling, cultivation’ to ‘training or education’ to ‘adoration’. The earliest known uses of the word, recorded in the 17th century, broadly denoted ‘worship’. From here cult came to refer to a specific branch of a religion or its rites and practices. By the early 18th century, cult could refer to a non-religious admiration or devotion, a person, idea or fad. By the 19th century, the word came to be used as ‘a religion regarded as unorthodox or spurious’.” — Merriam-Webster.
This issue of AnOther Magazine is dedicated