One of those tiny cultural artifacts that shouldn’t exist but do, the Anthony Giddens trading card falls somewhere between an inside joke and a sincere homage. It originated from a project that David Gauntlett oversaw at theory.org.uk, a website that in the late 1990s and early 2000s subtly developed into an odd little corner of the internet. The cards resembled baseball or football cards you might find in a corner store, but instead of pitchers and strikers, there were sociologists. Hall, Stuart. Butler, Judith. Foucault, Michel. And Giddens, of course.
The whole thing has a humorous quality, and I believe it is intended to be humorous, at least somewhat. Particularly in British universities, academic theory is often regarded with a sort of solemn reverence, and Giddens was the most established figure in British sociology during his heyday.
| Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Subject of the Card | Anthony Giddens, Baron Giddens of Southgate |
| Born | 18 January 1938, Edmonton, London |
| Known For | Theory of Structuration, the Third Way |
| Card Series | Theory.org.uk Trading Cards |
| Created By | David Gauntlett |
| First Released | Late 1990s, expanded through the 2000s |
| Card Theme | Social and cultural theorists, gender, identity, media studies |
| Notable Career Role | Director of the London School of Economics, 1997–2003 |
| Honours | Prince of Asturias Award, 2002; Life peerage, 2004 |
| Where to Find Cards | Listings appear on resale sites such as eBay and Pinterest archives |
| Original Project Site | theory.org.uk |
| Card Format | Glossy paperboard, standard trading card size |
LSE director and Tony Blair’s advisor. The man who used the Third Way to give New Labour its intellectual framework. Placing his face on a glossy collectible card felt like a subtle puncturing of all that, the kind of thing only a humorous academic would consider doing.
According to the surviving pictures on Pinterest and old screenshots from theory.org.uk, the card itself kept things straightforward. A picture of Giddens, his name, and a brief synopsis of his theories—typically regarding structuration or how contemporary identities construct narratives in late modernity—are included. That final detail is crucial. There is a subtle irony in witnessing a self-construction theorist reduced to a collectible card. Giddens spent the 1990s writing about how people in contemporary societies are compelled to construct themselves, almost like ongoing personal projects.

Although trading cards for a football player named DJ Giddens and a basketball player named J.R. Giddens are the most common search results these days, you can still find traces of the cards online, which says something about how attention shifts on the internet. Occasionally, the original cards appear on eBay listings; they are sometimes shrink-wrapped and sometimes not, and they are typically priced at the seller’s estimation of the value of a specialized academic curio.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that the cards arrived at a specific time. Cultural studies was experiencing its own unique cultural moment. Identity politics was becoming more widely discussed outside of academic settings. A project like theory.org.uk could feel genuinely playful rather than branded because the internet was still relatively new. Giddens’ writings on modernity, intimacy, and the runaway world were a perfect fit for the atmosphere.
You get a sense of how academic fame used to operate and how peculiar it was when you see this kind of item reappear in old archives. Even though the sociologist never achieved widespread recognition, his image ended up on a card that was traded among students who likely had mixed feelings about his writings. Small artifacts like these seem to reveal more about the time period than large-scale theories ever could. Another question—possibly not the most crucial one—is whether anyone is still actively collecting them.
