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I Kneeled Down Before My Maker: Allusions to Esau in the Book of Enos

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The Book of Enos constitutes a brief literary masterpiece. A close reading of Enos's autobiography reveals textual dependency not only on 1 Nephi 1:1-2 and Genesis 32–33, but also on earlier parts of the Jacob-Esau cycle in Genesis 25, 27. Enos's autobiographical allusions to hunting and hungering serve as narrative inversions of Esau's biography. The narrative of Genesis 27 exploits the name "Esau" in terms of the Hebrew verb ?sh/?sy ("make," "do"). Enos ("man") himself incorporates parono...