The answer given by Laurel is correct in that there is nothing preventing you from doing it. In fact, I've seen other sites often reproducing Q&A from various Stack Exchange sites (How-To Geek comes to mind), and heck, there are even a couple of guys who use tools to generate actual books and sell them. It's all allowed.
But since you ask about "any written or unwritten rules or conventions", and this is Meta.SO, I would like to add my (mostly personal) view on this. I appreciate it may be unpopular.
Even in the case where the content is yours, in my opinion, this practice comes across as unnecessary, to say the least. The (presumably good) content is already on a platform that we all are familiar with; is accessible to everyone, can be easily found by search engines, etc. To simply reproduce it on a personal blogging or media service looks to me like someone who is seeking more attention than would be appropriate. To put it more bluntly, it looks... weird. Too pushy.
I know Stack Overflow and Medium are not comparable, and the latter gives you a more personal "touch" over the content you create. What I would definitely not see as unfavourable is if you only link to some of your great answers on Stack Overflow, not reproducing it, but instead using as a reference or starting point for a deeper analysis/educational experience. That's how I've seen Jon Skeet and others do it.
I mean all this respectfully.