Queer Milton. David L. Orvis, ed. Early Modern Cultural Studies 1500-1700. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018. xxxiv + 314 pp. $119.99

Stephen Spencer
2019 Renaissance Quarterly  
As Erin Murphy explains, a queer Milton studies never materialized alongside queer theory in the 1990s. How fitting, then, that the scholarly marriage of Milton and queer studies would be belated, especially considering Milton's preoccupation with his own belatedness. Whether it is the twenty-three-year-old speaker of sonnet 7 worrying that his "late spring no bud or blossom showeth" or the mature poet of Paradise Lost speculating that his epic arrives "an age too late" in Restoration England,
more » ... ilton persistently aestheticizes his fear of being behind the times. The belated mode, as Murphy points out, animates much queer Renaissance historiography, thus suggesting that the value of a collection titled Queer Milton in 2018 resides not just in its ability to bring the field up to speed but to leverage its belatedness into critical reflection upon the presence of queer theory in early modern scholarship. Queer Milton (as well as the special issue of Early Modern Culture from which it emerged) indeed finds inspiration from the now long-standing debate concerning historicism in early modern queer studies. But, as Will Stockton suggests in his afterword, this debate has grown somewhat stale, largely due to its focus on Shakespeare. Rather than bemoan the author-centric status of early modern queer studies, Stockton and David Orvis (coeditors of the special issue) realized that bringing queer methodologies to Milton provided the opportunity to interrogate, rather than repudiate, the affective attachments scholars still bear toward individual authors. In expanding the special issue into a collection, Orvis faces the challenge of presenting a queer Milton exigent in his own right, without the sneaking suspicion that he is ultimately a function of the neoliberalizing university, promoting the progressive force of queering the past while consolidating it around canonical authors. The essays which originally appeared in the special issue demonstrate both historicist and theoretical approaches to queering Milton. Prioritizing the historicist approach is Orvis himself, who contributes a reading of perhaps the oddest moment in The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce: the Eros-Anteros myth. Milton "exploits the slew of contradictions and controversies attached to the story . . . in order to articulate a hitherto ineffable mutual love," which Orvis dubs "queer mutuality" (120-21). Joining Orvis is Stephen Guy-Bray, who argues that angelic union in Paradise Lost privileges "a nonreproductive and ultimately ungendered sexuality that we can only call queer" (140). Prioritizing the theoretical approach are Melissa Sanchez-who martials Jack Halberstam, Elizabeth Freeman, and Lee Edelman to locate in A Mask a queer theory of sex dependent on faith-and Drew Daniel-who applies Jasbir Puar's concept of "queer assemblage" to Dagon, the Philistine deity of Samson Agonistes, to measure the traffic between terror and effeminacy. While the historicist work tends to invoke RENAISSANCE QUARTERLY 1590 VOLUME LXXII, NO. 4
doi:10.1017/rqx.2019.490 fatcat:74cgjpenyrdujc6s7jjlrotdai