Turner gained a master's degree from
Queen's University, Canada, and his doctorate from the
University of East Anglia, in the UK. Turner taught at the Queensland Institute of Technology (now
Queensland University of Technology), the West Australian Institute of Technology (now part of
Curtin University), and was Professor of Cultural Studies in the English Department at the
University of Queensland before becoming the founding Director of the Centre for Critical and Cultural Studies in 1999. He was elected a Fellow of the
Australian Academy of the Humanities in 1997 and was elected president in 2004. From 2001 until 2004, he was a member of the Expert Advisory Panel for Creative Arts and Humanities of the
Australian Research Council (ARC). In 2004, Turner was successful in his application for the ARC Cultural Research Network, one of only 24 Research Networks funded by the ARC, while in 2006 he was awarded a Federation Fellowship by the ARC to study "Television in the post-broadcast era: The role of old and new media in the formation of national communities". In his speech to the
National Press Club (Australia) on 3 September 2008, the
Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research, Senator the Hon.
Kim Carr announced that Professor Turner had been appointed to the Prime Minister's Science, Engineering and Innovation Council (
PMSEIC). This made Turner the only Humanities scholar on the Council, and only the second since the Council's inception (as the Prime Minister's Science Council) in 1989. Turner was one of the key figures in the development of cultural and media studies in Australia. His work is used in many disciplines:
cultural and
media studies,
communications, history,
literary studies, and
film and
television studies. His over-arching research interests included Australian film and media, issues in
Australian nationalism, popular culture, celebrity,
talkback radio, audience studies, and the role of television in a post-broadcast era increasingly dominated by new media formats such as the Internet. His later research focuses on the transformation of "cultural fields". In 2015, the journal
Cultural Studies published a special issue "commemorating and evaluating the contribution of Graeme Turner to the field". Edited by Gerard Goggin, Anna Pertierra and Mark Andrejevic, this issue included contributions by
Meaghan Morris,
Toby Miller, Frances Bonner,
Tony Bennett, John Byron, and Melissa Gregg. Turner was appointed an
Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in the
2019 Queen's Birthday Honours for "distinguished service to higher education through pioneering work in the field of cultural studies and the humanities". Turner died on 25 November 2025. ==Selected bibliography==