An idea that won’t go away has an almost subdued stubbornness. It was never intended for David Gauntlett’s Theory Trading Cards, a small series of illustrated cards created for British media studies students almost twenty years ago, to make it this far. They were a side project, practically an afterthought, nestled between reading lists and blog entries on a personal academic website. And yet, here they are, appearing in sociology seminars at universities from Ohio to Oregon, distributed by instructors who discovered them virtually by chance.
The cards were published sometime in the mid-2000s by Gauntlett, a British media scholar best known for his research on gender, identity, and making as a means of connection. They reduced difficult theoretical frameworks—thinkers such as Foucault, Butler, and Giddens—to easily understood, almost lighthearted visual formats. It wasn’t a stylish design. It wasn’t intended to be. However, there was something about the format’s directness that made abstract concepts seem suddenly approachable and almost tangible.

It’s difficult to ignore how the current state of American education has produced the ideal environment for precisely this kind of tool. There is a real tension in sociology classes across the United States: students come with a great deal of cultural fluency, understanding identity as fluid and navigating multiple digital selves on a daily basis, but they find it difficult to relate those lived experiences to formal theoretical language. In a way that no 400-page textbook can quite match, Gauntlett’s cards appear to subtly close that gap.
Gauntlett has long maintained that identity is malleable and that our perceptions of ourselves are shaped by the media we consume in both overt and covert ways. His revised work on media, gender, and identity from 2008 examined how representation—who is depicted doing what and how—gradually alters people’s internal maps. A student could physically hold the cards, pass them to a classmate, or debate them across a seminar table as a result of the cards’ translation of this type of layered thinking. That physical attribute is more important than most people realize.
American educators seem to be rediscovering the peculiar power of analog tools after becoming weary of digital overload. A half-read PDF on a laptop doesn’t feel the same as a card you can hold. According to some professors, just handing out the cards at the beginning of a seminar alters the atmosphere in the room. Students handle the cards, turn them over, and compare which theorist they were given. Before a formal word is spoken, conversation takes place. It’s really hard to say if that’s a small miracle or just clever design, but it’s probably both.
The cards were first hosted on a website that Gauntlett later shut down, reasoning that content that was eighteen years old had most likely reached the end of its useful life. He received a barrage of messages within hours of taking down the website. People were angry. Sincere distress, not just a slight annoyance. He reposted the PDFs in secret. The intensity of people’s attachment to a tool that was never advertised, marketed, or adequately explained can be inferred from that response alone.
The current state of sociology education in the United States seems to be a slow, organic reckoning with how theory is taught and to whom. No loud or disruptive revolution in education is being brought about by Gauntlett’s cards. They are engaged in more fascinating activities. They are demonstrating that a TED talk or a marketing budget are not necessary when the right idea is presented in the right way. Sometimes all it has to do is endure long enough for the world to eventually catch up.
