I first learned about David Gauntlett’s Theory Trading Cards while watching a graduate student shuffle them like a poker hand in a Brooklyn coffee shop. She was getting ready for an oral exam. Judith Butler was in her right palm, and Foucault was in her left. I found it both ridiculous and strangely clever, transforming the intricate framework of cultural theory into something you could spread out on a coffee table.
The British sociologist Gauntlett had no intention of becoming well-known in the field of American media studies. The cards were a small side project from 2006 that was primarily intended as a teaching joke for UK undergraduates. They were printed as PDFs on his former website theory.org.uk. Professors from Boston to Berkeley continue to download, photocopy, and laminate those same PDFs eighteen years later. Their popularity has a subtle stubbornness that is difficult to describe in terms of traditional academia.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | David Gauntlett |
| Nationality | British |
| Known For | Media, Gender and Identity (2002, updated 2008) |
| Current Affiliation | Toronto Metropolitan University, Canada |
| Major Concept | Identity construction through media consumption |
| Famous Project | Theory Trading Cards (2006) |
| Other Notable Work | Making is Connecting (Second Expanded Edition) |
| Research Method | The Lego Identity Experiment |
| Influences Cited | Goffman, Butler, Bandura, Giddens |
| Reach | Featured across UK A-Level and US university media curricula |
The fact that Gauntlett never pretended theory had to feel sacred is, I believe, part of the appeal. His writing treats readers more like curious adults than like students who need to be impressed, especially in Media, Gender, and Identity. When academics were still arguing whether audiences were passive blobs or active negotiators, he made the somewhat heretical claim that our extensive media exposure could hardly fail to shape how we conduct ourselves.
But it’s the contrast that makes him the unlikely hero. American media studies are often grimly political, Marxist, or French. Gauntlett offers something different, a cheerful empiricism replete with Lego bricks and references to the Spice Girls. He asked participants to construct models of their identities in the well-known Lego experiment, which sounds like a kid’s birthday celebration. However, it yielded genuinely intriguing results regarding Goffman’s concept of public and private selves as well as how individuals create biographical narratives in order to understand themselves.
All of this was condensed into the trading cards. Each one included a brief description of the theorist’s primary contribution, a thumbnail portrait, and an odd little hierarchy of qualities that resembled a Top Trumps deck. American students, who grew up with baseball cards and Pokémon, reacted right away. Suddenly, theory had a weight, a shape, and a stat line on the back of the card. Stuart Hall and Anthony Giddens could be ranked in a way that felt more lighthearted than simplistic.

Gauntlett’s longevity seems to be a combination of accident and design. A few years ago, he folded his old websites, hoping the cards would discreetly disappear into archive.org. Then the emails began to arrive. Teachers desired their return. Within twelve hours, he gave in and reposted the PDFs with a somewhat perplexed comment about how he had misjudged their durability.
As this happens, it’s difficult not to wonder if the cards are still in use because they bridge the gap between abstract theory and how young people actually absorb concepts, which no serious textbook ever bothered to address. Through play, repetition, and tiny collectibles that fit in a back pocket. Gauntlett may not have intended to become an expert in American media pedagogy. He simply did.
