The cultural highlights of the reign of Queen Anne (1702-1714) have long
been overlooked. However, recent scholarship, including the present
volume, is demonstrating that Anne has been seriously underestimated,
both as a person, and as a monarch, and that there was much cultural
activity of note in what might be called an interim period, coming after
the deaths of Dryden and Purcell but before the blossoming of Pope and
Handel, after the glories of Baroque architecture but before the triumph
of Burlingtonian neoclassicism. The authors of Queen Anne and the Arts
make a case for Anne's reign as a time of experimentation and
considerable accomplishment in new genres, some of which developed, some
of which faded away. The volume includes essays on the music, drama,
poetry, quasi-operas, political pamphlets, and architecture, as well as
on newer genres, such as coin and medal collecting, hymns, and poetical
miscellanies, all produced during Anne's reign.