Dr Steve Jones delivered a talk on the book at the Cult Film Conference in 2021. Watch it here Argues that contemporary slasher films embody a turn towards the metamodern sensibilityDebunks the prevailing idea that the slasher film has consisted mainly of remakes since the mid-2000s via its detailed examination of contemporary American slasher films that have been largely overlooked by critics and scholarsRevises dominant understandings of this popular subgenre by accounting for a variety of approaches and techniques such as hypercoding that filmmakers use to drive the subgenre forward and to distinguish new slasher films from their predecessorsUses metamodern theory to explain these developments, and to connect these films to a broader cultural shift that foregrounds sincerity and felt experienceMakes an intervention by being the first monograph to apply metamodernism to a specific aspect of popular culture in a sustained way, and using that sustained focus to refine the model for future useAccounts for more than 150 films, providing in-depth analysis of 20 key case study filmsIt is commonly proposed that since the mid-2000s, the slasher subgenre has been dominated by unoriginal remakes of classics . Consequently, most original slasher films have been ignored by academics (and critics), leaving the field with a limited understanding of this highly popular subgenre. This book corrects that mischaracterisation by analysing contemporary slasher films that sincerely attempt to innovate within the subgenre. I argue that these films reflect broader cultural turns towards sincerity, optimism in the face of crisis, and an emphasis on felt experience that are indicative of a metamodern sensibility.This is the first book to use metamodernism to analyse film in a sustained way, and the first academic work to use metamodernism to examine horror. The Metamodern Slasher offers readers new ways to understand the slasher film, the horror genre, and also the cultural moment we find ourselves in.