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The near absence of the horror genre in Black Studies schol- arship about the afterlives of slavery can be attributed to the fact that scholars are discussing the “afterlives” of slavery in a non-mystical way while the horror genre traditionally presents “afterlives” in supernatural f orms. W hile these connotations of afterlives certainly mean different things, they converge in Candyman demonstrating the potential harmony between the two uses of the term. In this paper, I place both versions of Candyman in conversation with recent Black Studies scholar- ship as well as national discourses about racial inequality and white violence in order to argue for Candyman’s relevance to contemporary debates about slavery and its afterlives as a conceptual framework. In addition, I zero in on the 2021 re- make to demonstrate how Nia DaCosta’s Candyman (2021) clarifies t he l egend’s r elationship to t he a fterlives of sl avery and operates as a corrective to Bernard Rose’s 1992 film. The intersection of the supernatural afterlife and the afterlives of slavery as understood by Black Studies scholars comes forth in DaCosta’s sequel that centralizes the operations of white supremacy and resulting Black trauma.