Tara Brabazon


Tara Brabazon is the Professor of Cultural Studies and formerly Dean of Graduate Research at Flinders University, Australia. From 2023-24 she was a Dean at Charles Darwin University. She has worked in ten universities in the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

Scholarship

Brabazon's key areas of research include media literacies, popular cultural studies, creative industries, city imaging, regional development, the knowledge economy, information management, information literacy, cultural studies and the negotiation of cultural difference. Concepts she has developed include "the Google Effect," "Digital Dieting", and the 3Ds. Brabazon is also continuing the work of the late Professor Steve Redhead by developing the "claustropolitanism" theory, as a revision of cosmopolitan sociology.
While a Professor of Media in the United Kingdom, Brabazon delivered her Inaugural Address titled "Google is White Bread of the Mind." This research was presented in her book The University of Google. She explored the development of information literacy in the first year of university degrees.
Her professional roles have led to specialisations in aspects of cultural difference, social inclusion, doctoral education, contemporary higher education and leadership. As Dean of Graduate Research, Brabazon developed a weekly vlog series for higher degree students. They currently number 300 videos, most created from requests by students.

Qualifications

Recognition

Personal life

Tara Brabazon was born in Perth, Western Australia, going on to write a book about its music in Liverpool of the South Seas. She married Professor Steve Redhead in 2002. Their relationship was featured in the Times Higher Education under the title Marital Bliss. After Redhead's death from pancreatic cancer in 2018, Brabazon wrote about their relationship in the second edition of The End of the Century Party.
Brabazon is currently married to Professor Jamie Quinton, Professor and Head of the School of Natural Sciences at Massey University in Aotearoa, New Zealand.

Major publications

  • Tara Brabazon, 2025. Ten drafts to complete your PhD. Transition Elements Press.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2025. How to embrace academic failure: Building an academic life with meaning, integrity and honesty. London: Edward Elgar.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2022. Twelve rules for life: A stroppy feminist's guide through teaching, learning, politics, and Jordan Peterson. Singapore: Springer.
  • Tara Brabazon, Tiffany Lyndall Knight, and Natalie Hills. 2020. The Creative PhD: Challenges, Opportunities and Reflexive Practice. Bingley: Emerald.
  • Tara Brabazon, Steve Redhead and Sunny Rue Chivaura. 2018. Trump Studies: An intellectual guide to why citizens do not act in their best interests. Bingley: Emerald.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2015. Play: A theory of learning and change. Berlin: Springer.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2015. Enabling University: Impairment, ability and social justice in higher education. Berlin: Springer.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2014. Unique Urbanity? Rethinking third tier cities, degeneration, regeneration and mobility. Berlin: Springer.
  • Tara Brabazon, Mick Winter and Bryn Gandy. 2014. Digital Wine: How QR codes facilitate new markets for small wine industries. Berlin: Springer.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2013. Digital Dieting: From information obesity to intellectual fitness. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2013. City Imaging: Regeneration, renewal and decay. Berlin: Springer.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2012. Digital Dialogues and Community 2.0: After avatars, trolls and puppets. Oxford: Chandos.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2010.Popular Music: Topics, trends, trajectories. London: Sage.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2008. The Revolution Will Not Be Downloaded: Dissent in the digital age. Oxford: Chandos.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2008. Thinking Popular Culture: War, terrorism and writing. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2007. The University of Google: Education in the information age. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2006. Playing on the Periphery: Sport, memory, identity. London: Routledge.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2005. From Revolution to Revelation: Generation X, popular culture, popular memory. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2005. Liverpool of the South Seas: Perth and its popular music. Perth: UWA Press.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2002. Digital Hemlock: Internet education and the poisoning of teaching. Sydney: UNSW Press.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2002. Ladies who Lunge: Celebrating difficult women. Sydney: UNSW Press.
  • Tara Brabazon. 2000. Tracking the Jack: A retracing of the Antipodes. Sydney: UNSW Press.

Audiobooks

Brabazon has developed new strategies for research dissemination through the audiobook, producing ten titles between 2018 and 2025.
  • Trump Studies
  • Memories of the Future
  • Comma
  • Know what you do not know: information literacy for PhD students
  • The Three Wise Monkeys of Research: Epistemology / Ontology / Methodology
  • 12 Rules of Academic Life
  • The Pernicious PhD Supervisor
  • start: Moving from Despair to Defiance
  • Rescue Yourself: How to complete a PhD without a supervisor
  • Setting up your life to write a PhD: Building a doctorate one sentence at a time
  • How to embrace academic failure: Building an academic life with meaning, integrity and honesty
  • Ten drafts to complete your PhD
This project is developing through the 'auditory academic' initiative, offering sonic activism and interventions through diverse sonic platforms. Brabazon started one of the first academic podcasts in 2010, with over 800 episodes. She has also made a spoken word contribution to Nostalgia Deathstar's 2025 album, They killed the flame. She contributed her voice to "ZU" and "ZU Too."

Journalism

Brabazon is a columnist for a range of education and cultural publications. She has produced over 150 articles for the Times Higher Education, and has written for the Times Literary Supplement, Times Education Supplement, The Guardian, Arts Hub Australia, Arts Hub UK, and Campus Review, also featuring on the cover of a 2019 edition. She has been profiled in a range of publications, including The Guardian.