Keywords
Enos and Jacob–Esau wordplay, symbolic geography allusion, Mount Seir reference
Abstract
Enos’s use of the onomastic wordplay in the Jacob and Esau cycle enables him to meaningfully allude to the symbolic geography of those stories and incorporate it into his New World setting (e.g., allusions to the river Jabbok and Peniel/Penuel, the site of Jacob’s “wrestle” with the divine “man”). A third instance of this type of allusion occurs with Enos’s recollection that he “went to hunt beasts in the forest[s]” (Enos 1:3), which appears to subtly allude to Mount Seir, the forested hill country in the land of Edom inhabited by Esau and his descendants.
Recommended Citation
Bowen, Matthew L.
(2025)
"“Behold, I Went to Hunt Beasts in the Forest”: An Addendum on Enos, Esau, and the Symbolic Geography of Seir,"
Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship: Vol. 63, Article 6.
Available at:
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/interpreter/vol63/iss1/6