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The Postmodern Slasher Film - by Steve Jones
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Highlights
- Scream reputedly transformed the slasher subgenre in 1996, heralding a new subgeneric form: the postmodern slasher.
- Author(s): Steve Jones
- 272 Pages
- Performing Arts, Film
Description
About the Book
Debunks the prevailing idea that the postmodern slasher film is distinguished by the employment of intertextuality, metafictional self-reflexivity, pastiche, and deconstruction.
Book Synopsis
Scream reputedly transformed the slasher subgenre in 1996, heralding a new subgeneric form: the postmodern slasher. Despite being a distinctive, influential phase in the subgenre's development, it has been widely assumed that postmodern slasher films are distinguished from their predecessors because they employ intertextuality, metafictional self-reflexivity, pastiche and deconstruction.
The Postmodern Slasher Film challenges those assumptions by demonstrating that those same traits have been present in the slasher subgenre since its 1980s boom-period. This book instead argues that postmodern slasher films are more pertinently distinguished by their tone, which is characterised by self-consciousness, duplicity, cynicism and fatalism.
Review Quotes
Conventional wisdom suggests that if you've seen one slasher film, then you've seen them all. Jones demolishes this notion by paying such close, thoughtful attention to one particular form of this subgenre that our understanding of slasher films as a whole undergoes a major transformation. We see these films anew.-- "Adam Lowenstein, University of Pittsburgh, author of Horror Film and Otherness"