The Genre Apocalypse Reconsidered

Full title
The Genre Apocalypse Reconsidered
Research notes

MDE/not checked/14/03/2016

Reference type
Author(s)
Collins, John J.
Year
2016
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Zeitschrift für Antikes Christentum / Journal of Ancient Christianity
Volume
20
Issue / Series Volume
1
Abbreviated Series Name
ZAC
Pages
21–40
Work type
Label
04/04/2016
Abstract

The analysis of the genre apocalypse published in Semeia 14 (1979) relied on a classificatory approach, which identified core features of the genre, listed features that were typical but not necessary, and distinguished different types of apocalypses. The main difficulty encountered by such an approach is that genres have fuzzy edges. Some works that fit the definition are atypical of the genre, while some that do not have much in common with it. The emergence of prototype theory as a method of analysis is helpful in this regard, and allows for a less rigid kind of classification, without lapsing into the indeterminacy of family resemblances. Genres are recognized on the basis of a few clear exemplars. Other works may resemble them to a greater or lesser extent.