Post-Internet Horror Film

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A01=Max Jokschus
algorythms
Author_Max Jokschus
Category=ATFA
Category=ATMN
Category=FKM
Category=JBCT1
critical internet studies
cyberphobia
dark web
data capitalism
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
film analysis
folk horror
forthcoming
horror films
horror genre
internet age
internet horror
internet technologies
resistance
spectrality
surveillance capitalism
user agency

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350611160
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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An exploration of how contemporary horror films focusing on the internet engage with society’s material, functional and ideological reorientation to new digital realities, this book shows how subjects can resist the age of data capitalism and the authority of the algorithm.

Upending the notion that the horror genre – arguably the seismograph of cultural unease – has remained unresponsive to the unprecedented dangers of the digital age, The Post-Internet Horror Film illustrates how the genre tackles the (un)representability of ubiquitous computing. With consideration of how ‘smart’ technologies and interconnectedness of all computing devises via the web destabilise conceptions of the internet, Max Jokschus examines to what extent contemporary internet horror films contribute to fostering awareness of the internet’s political economy – and how they, indeed, obscure it.

Detailing a new phenomenon that will only become more urgent with time, and calling upon data-capitalism criticism, Jokschus provides a systemic analysis of this emerging genre, its semiotics, affects and ideologies. Breaking the genre down into first and second-wave internet horror cycles and covering themes ‘cyberphobia’, ‘datanoia’ and the dark web, the book makes case studies of such films as Strangeland (1999), Pulse (2001), The Lawnmower Man (1992), Chatroom (2010), Cyberbully (2015), Girl House (2016), Bedeviled (2016), Child’s Play (2019), Countdown (2018), Selfie From Hell (2018), and Dark Web: Descent into Hell (2021). Offering new ways to think, write and teach about the horror film, as well as modelling how critical internet studies and film studies can expand each other’s insights, The Post-Internet Horror Film explores a new kind of scary but also avenues for user agency and resistance.

Max Jokschus is Research Assistant at the Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg, Germany. He recieved his PhD from the University of Leipzig, Germany, in British Cultural Studies. He has published numerous essays and given numerous talks discussing contemporary film and literature.

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