A classically trained musician with an honours degree in flute performance, Burgess completed a Master of Philosophy at the University of Queensland[4] before undertaking a PhD at Queensland University of Technology. Her doctoral thesis, entitled Vernacular creativity and new media, focused on the ways in which everyday practices of symbolic creativity (including storytelling and amateur photography) both pre-date digital technologies and are remediated by them.[5]
Notable publications
In 2009, with Joshua Green, Burgess published the book YouTube: Online Video and Participatory Culture.[6] The book examines the ways in which YouTube is being used by the media industries, by audiences and amateur producers, and by particular communities of interest, and explains how these uses challenge existing ideas about cultural ‘production’ and ‘consumption’. It includes specially commissioned chapters by John Hartley and Henry Jenkins.
The book was widely reviewed in academic journals including Media International Australia,[7]Popular Communication[8] and the International Journal of Digital Television.[9] It has since been translated into Italian, Brazilian Portuguese and Polish.[10]
With Andrew King, Burgess co-edited an edition of M/C Journal themed "Porn and the Mediasphere",[11] and worked on the ARC-funded Understanding Pornography in Australia report.[12]
Media appearances
On his blog, Professor Henry Jenkins interviewed Burgess in October 2007 about her doctoral research.[13]
Burgess was interviewed in January 2009 by The Enthusiast magazine about YouTube's difficulties balancing copyright issues with the creative activities of its users.[14]
In 2010, Burgess was interviewed about her YouTube research by prime-time Channel Seven current affairs TV program Today Tonight.[15]
In February 2011, Burgess spoke to Radio National's Background Briefing on how natural disasters are handled and mishandled by both broadcast and participatory media.[16]