Holding a trading card that genuinely inquires about Theodor Adorno’s astrological sign has a subtly ridiculous quality. And yet that’s exactly what David Gauntlett produced in 2000, releasing a set of theory trading cards through his website theory.org.uk that nobody in academic publishing had thought to make before. Or maybe they had thought of it, decided it was too strange, and moved on. Gauntlett didn’t.
The cards showed up at a specific time. Media studies in Britain was still finding its footing as a serious discipline, fighting off the perception that it was a soft option compared to history or economics. Meanwhile, sports trading cards had spent decades proving that a small piece of cardboard, packed with the right data in the right format, could make you genuinely care about a person you’d never met. Gauntlett appears to have noticed that connection and followed it somewhere unexpected.

Each card in the series included a photograph, a biographical sketch, key publications, and a compressed summary of the theorist’s core ideas. The format sounds almost clinical when described that way, but in practice it worked differently. Holding a card about Michel Foucault while reading about power and discourse creates a different kind of attention than scrolling through a Wikipedia entry. It’s tangible. It has edges. You can flip it over. That tactile quality seems small until you realize how much of academic learning happens in the abstract, detached from any physical object at all.
The project’s ability to be profitable without really attempting to be is intriguing and possibly underappreciated. A 2004 edition with 21 cards covering significant social and cultural theorists is listed on Goodreads. The StoryGraph describes it as a guide for “students, teachers, and fans.” That word, fans, is doing a lot of work. It’s hard not to notice how deliberately Gauntlett borrowed the language of fandom and collector culture and applied it to people like bell hooks and Stuart Hall. Depending on who was in control, that might have felt liberating or disrespectful.
Here, Gauntlett’s larger career provides some background. He was never the type of scholar who confined his thoughts to conference rooms. Theory.org.uk was described as award-winning at the time, and it pursued the idea that media theory could live in public, not just in university libraries. The trading cards fit that impulse perfectly, perhaps more perfectly than any of his longer-form writing did. A 300-page book argues for accessibility. It’s illustrated with a deck of cards.
When Gauntlett eventually took his older websites down, he almost immediately received messages about the cards specifically. He posted the PDFs within hours. That reaction โ quiet, quick, a little touching โ suggested the cards had lodged themselves somewhere in people’s memories more firmly than their modest origins might suggest. Someone had kept them. They had been used, taught, and possibly even exchanged by someone.
Whether the theory trading card format had any subsequent effects on educational publishing is still unknown. Given how obviously it resolved a genuine issue, there is a sense that it ought to have: dense ideas, compact format, memorable presentation. However, educational merchandising moves slowly, and odd, brilliant ideas frequently vanish without leaving clear traces. At least this one left a few.
