Meta what??? Meta-modernism: describing our cultural zeitgeist
Navigating the "meta" madness of our times: this article explores metamodernism, the cultural mood swinging between hope and irony, and how the church can offer solid ground in a world of shifting sands.
Written by Rev. Richard Baird (Church and Culture Consultant at dia-LOGOS)

Culture is where spiritual longings are exposed – Brett McCracken

Last year, amidst the cultural noise of woke, Christian nationalism and armchair opinionista’s on the Israel-Gaza conflict, there was a little blip on my cultural radar: I came across this term ‘meta-modernism.’ Yip: there’s a new ‘ism’ in town – a shift in the cultural vibe. I couldn’t give it too much attention at the time owing to health issues, but made a mental note to check it out in the new year. And if you find yourself going “huh?” over the term then I want to venture and say you’ve understood it perfectly…here’s my attempt to make sense of it for you after scouting the territory:

When I say ‘new,’ I mean it in the sense of emerging as a term in popular culture. The term itself has been around for a while (initially describing trends in American literature), but as a term describing what was happening in our culture it became popularised through a paper written in 2010 by Dutch cultural analysts Timotheus Vermeulen and Robin van den Akker entitled “Notes on Metamodernism.” In their article they were seeking to describe the cultural shift they had been observing in the arts and culture, and they outlined what they saw as key facets of metamodernism. That article served as a catalyst for lots of dialogue over metamodernism. Before we get there, here’s the approach I’ll take in this article:

1) Brief history of thought to give context

2) What it is

3) How it reveals itself

4) The Church’s opportunity

A Very Brief history of thought

Let’s start with the Middle Ages. This was an era characterised by a Christian view of the world, in that God was understood to be real and the Bible God’s Book revealing an objective moral law, and provided early foundations for western civilisation. We call this view pre-modernism or traditionalism. The path to fulfilment was found through aligning oneself with what God had revealed in His Word. Within this era the Renaissance was birthed with the rediscovery of all things classical with respect to Greco-Roman culture. The human started to be the focus (humanism) and this was initially done within the context of the Christian faith, but eventually the humanism which developed was ‘ripped away from its Christian moorings’ and became a secular humanism which ultimately became destructive and a clash of worldviews emerged. Man, and not God, became the measuring stick, and this was considered enlightened. The Enlightenment (Age of Reason) was subsequently birthed which gave elevated status to human reasoning and rejected revelation. Faith was now subject to reason, and required justifying itself in the face of human reason. The Enlightenment birthed Modernism which became the dominant paradigm until the early (in my understanding) 20th century, characterised by reason, naturalism, materialism and rapid advancement in technology, which was equated with ‘progress.’ Modernism was associated with the rise of science and industry, and questioned the traditional assumptions and authorities held in the Middle Ages. The individual became king. If the Enlightenment and the modernism that arose questioned the legitimacy of the medieval and traditional/pre-modernist worldview, then post-modernism, which arose primarily from the 1960’s onwards, questioned the validity of the modernist world-view. This is because the optimism of modernism wasn’t playing out in reality: world wars and totalitarian regimes revealed this. As a result there was plenty of skepticism floating around, especially of the notion of objective Truth and the notion of an all-encompassing grand story of reality (metanarrative – whether religious or science), and definitely skepticism over modernism’s capacity to make things better. Skepticism isn’t exactly the pathway to hope, but it’s what led to post-modernism which has been seen to be a somewhat cynical outlook on life. Post-modernism honed in on how knowledge and language were instruments of power, and that we needed to recognise that there were a plurality of perspectives (little ‘truths’ as opposed to Truth). With its roots in suspicion and cynicism, the fruit would be despair, and the bankruptcy of this philosophical approach has led to the context for a new mood: metamodernism (or post post-modernism).

What is interesting about post-modernism as a way of thinking is that within academic circles it’s been proclaimed as now dead. I’m not too sure about that(but I’m probably just revealing my ignorance of the finer nuances of this philosophical approach): I’m thinking more along the lines of that it may be on life-support or perhaps a course of anti-biotics, but if it is dead then we’re still experiencing the stench of the corpse. Ideas don’t tend to die that quickly. It certainly isn’t a sustainably liveable philosophy, but I need only point out the woke movement as a fruit of post-modernism (which granted is certainly getting a massive push-back) as well as the string of Christians engaging in the deconstruction of their faith. In terms of metamodernism, it seems that it isn’t a case of post-modernism being dead, but rather it is being morphed into something different.

Meta-modernism is unique from modernism and especially post-modernism in that it seeks to find a bridge by utilising the best of both worlds, except the best here is the positive aspects of modernism and the negative aspects of post-modernism. If you were to use Hegel’s concept of history as analogy, then modernism would be the thesis, post-modernism would be the anti-thesis and meta-modernism the synthesis. Meta is a Greek prefix that can be used in the sense of with, between and beyond, and metamodernism places itself both alongside and between (and beyond) modernism and post-modernism, but oscillating between the various poles of these two ideological frameworks like a pendulum swinging. As Vermeulen and Akker explain:

Ontologically, metamodernism oscillates between the modern and the postmodern. It oscillates between a modern enthusiasm and a postmodern irony, between hope and melancholy, between naıvete ´ and knowingness, empathy and apathy, unity and plurality, totality and fragmentation, purity and ambiguity. Indeed, by oscillating to and fro or back and forth, the metamodern negotiates between the modern and the postmodern. One should be careful not to think of this oscillation as a balance however; rather, it is a pendulum swinging between 2, 3, 5, 10, innumerable poles. Each time the metamodern enthusiasm swings toward fanaticism, gravity pulls it back toward irony; the moment its irony sways toward apathy, gravity pulls it back toward enthusiasm.
Did you pick up on the contrasts? Metamodernism has terminology which seems contradictory and delights in the paradox and even oxymoronic. This is not a ‘both/and’ philosophical approach, but a ‘both/neither…’

Another writer describes it as follows:

Metamodernism considers that our era is characterized by an oscillation between aspects of both modernism and postmodernism. We see this manifest as a kind of informed naivety, a pragmatic idealism, a moderate fanaticism, oscillating between sincerity and irony, deconstruction and construction, apathy and affect, attempting to attain some sort of transcendent position, as if such a thing were within our grasp. The metamodern generation understands that we can be both ironic and sincere in the same moment; that one does not necessarily diminish the other.
Let me share a personal example. One evening I was chatting with our youth and I made the remark on how I felt for the Gen Z generation because there were so many ‘spiritualities’ on offer through social media, and that discernment is really needed to pick and choose. One young lady replied by saying “We don’t pick and choose – we just embrace them all.” That’s metamodernism.

So how do we define it?

Vermuelen and Akker describe it as a “structure of feeling” marked by “(often guarded) hopefulness and (at times feigned) sincerity”—deriving from a realization that “history is moving rapidly beyond its much proclaimed end.”

Please tell me I’m not the only one that went “huh?” at reading their descriptions!

Brett McCraken from Gospel Coalition helpfully explains it as follows:

Metamodernism is what came after postmodernism, which is what came after modernism. If postmodernism cynically reacts against and deconstructs modernism, metamodernism reacts against modernism and postmodernism, affirming and critiquing aspects of both. Metamodernism opposes the “either/or” bifurcation of modernism and postmodernism. It refuses to choose between sincerity/certainty/hope (modernism) and irony/deconstruction/nihilism (postmodernism). It values both, even if—or perhaps precisely because—such a synthesis is, in the end, illogical and incoherent. Metamodernism accepts this incoherence because it values mood and affect (how I’m feeling / what I’m resonating with) more than rigid logic.

If this seems like a “have your cake and eat it too” philosophy, that’s sort of the point. Shaped by the endless, have-it-your-way horizons of the internet (a structural multiverse of innumerable “truths”), metamodernism is a worldview as wide open and consumer friendly as the smartphone. Take or leave what you want, follow or unfollow, swipe right or left: it’s your iWorld, so make it a good one.

What we need to understand is that this is not a prescriptive ideology that someone came up with and said “this is how to think” such as post-modernism was. Instead metamodernism is a descriptive term of what is being seen in culture, although there are thinkers that are clarifying and embracing and encouraging folk to think along these lines. It’s like Neapolitan ice-cream: many colours and flavours in one dish. It’s a mood where vibe trumps veritas, where truth is subjectively defined but objectively imposed and personal truth lived as if it were objectively true. It longs for a better future but not convinced it can be attained but we’ll try anyway. Incoherence is not an issue in this way of seeing the world: pointing out illogicality is likely to simply get a shoulder shrug response.

So how does it reveal itself?

Well, in TV and movies its everywhere…but have a look at the trailer of 2022 movie Everything, Everywhere All at Once (which itself is a good description of metamodernism) to dizzy your brain (you’ll find it on YouTube). This movie explores themes of identity and existence and right and wrong within the context of a multiverse. As a contrast, Top Gun Maverick is not a metamodern movie (its more modernist) because that is a straight forward storyline involving a hero overcoming odds. Just about every new movie and show on Netflix for example will be metamodernist: if it contains dark humour and irony alongside genuine sentimental moments, then you’re seeing the metamodernist outlook.

But how does it further reveal itself in popular culture?

There are many manifestations. Vincent Benjamin in his article for Christianity Today highlights three observations: apocalyptic hope, the inversion of worldview building and the construction of highly narrated identities. In terms of apocalyptic hope, we are dealing with a generation that has known nothing but global crisis after global crisis, so that while they might get shocked by events, they’re not surprised. But whilst recognising that things are bad, they don’t want to necessarily buy into dystopian futures: they want to see what they can do to change it.

As for inverted worldview building, this is quite interesting as well. Most of us grew up with questions of ethics being built upon a foundation that we hold to be true: so we believe Christianity to be true and then build our ethics upon that. In metamodernism, this is inverted, in that the individual will decide what their ethic is, and then look for an ideology that matches.

With respect to highly narrated identities, as James Emery White explains, what happens here is that we would self-diagnose who we are and, from that, over-narrate our identity under the impression that we are bettering our mental health. In other words, you self-diagnose and identify with your self-diagnosis. You overanalyze your own story to explain, justify or solve your problems. This is most clearly seen in the LGBTQ movement which is now including the self-identifying as animals.

The Church’s Challenge & Opportunity

It goes without saying that a major contributing factor to this metamodern mood is social media. Social media has created a glass ceiling of superficiality which has created a hunger for true meaning. Social media doesn’t encourage a logical linear way of thinking, since scrolling through social media feeds is an exercise in random unrelated feeds feeding your brain (and research is revealing a link to anxiety as well).

This creates an apologetic challenge, because incoherence is not an issue to this generation. Nonetheless a surprising opportunity presents itself not so much in defending the existence of truth (which we must continue to do) but in explaining why Biblical ethics are good, and how many of the ethics that metamodernists hold onto have their roots in Scripture.

Another observation is that while Christians don’t embrace contradictions, we do embrace paradox! Think of the paradox of predestination and free will, or the Incarnational doctrine of fully God as though not man and fully man as though not God, or the doctrine of the Trinity: Three in one – you get the idea. One particular paradox which will resonate with metamodernists is that of Transcendence and Immanence of God.

I also think that metamodernism is probably the most ‘authentically human’ outlook on life that we have seen for a while, and I would attribute this to the fact that it has in a sense developed ‘naturally’ out of disillusionment with previous ways of thinking. Human nature is full of contradictions, but this represents a way of seeking to fill a void that only God can fill.

Ultimately, the longings revealed find their answer in the gospel. For example, identity is not a rabbit hole of excuses to justify behaviour, but can be fully realised in understanding who God created us to be. And yes, the world is in crisis, and we groan with creation as in Romans 8, but the story is not over yet because Christ has promised a new beginning. And of course there is a reason the world is in a mess: sin. But there’s a reason we can have hope: redemption.

How long will this way of thinking be with us? Probably longer than post-modernism, but ultimately it is not going to satisfy either. But the hunger for meaning, for resonating with transcendence, the desire to fix things against all hope: we can speak into that.

i Timotheus Vermeulen & Robin van den Akker (2010) Notes on metamodernism, Journal of Aesthetics & Culture, 2:1, 5677, DOI: 10.3402/jac.v2i0.5677 Link: https://doi.org/10.3402/jac.v2i0.5677
ii James Emery White, Serious Times (Madison: Intervarsity Press,2004) p.17-29
iii Cited in article below (iv)