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Home » Why Theory Trading Cards Are Having Their Pokémon Moment — and What It Means for Academic Culture
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Why Theory Trading Cards Are Having Their Pokémon Moment — and What It Means for Academic Culture

Melissa BridwellBy Melissa BridwellMay 13, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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Why Theory Trading Cards Are Having Their Pokémon Moment — and What It Means for Academic Culture
Why Theory Trading Cards Are Having Their Pokémon Moment — and What It Means for Academic Culture
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Theory trading cards have returned to the conversation somewhere between a joke and a genuine love letter. They are sometimes tucked into the back of a syllabus like a wink, passed around at conference book fairs, and photographed on disorganized graduate student desks. A glossy foil Foucault. Judith Butler in holography. It seems ridiculous at first, but after a minute of sitting with it, it begins to seem almost inevitable.

The initial run, which originated on theory.org.uk and was expanded by Critical-Theory.com in 2013, was always partially a joke. Commodify all of them. The hard work was done by the pun. However, over the past few years, what initially appeared to be a niche bit of academic humor has subtly evolved into something more persistent. These days, Discord servers exist. Unauthorized Stuart Hall expansion packs are being printed by Etsy sellers. The way a thirteen-year-old in 1999 handled a first-edition Charizard is how a small but devoted subculture treats thinkers.

FieldDetails
Concept originLaunched in the early 2010s by theory.org.uk, a long-running cultural studies resource run by media scholar David Gauntlett
Notable thinkers featuredFoucault, Derrida, Butler, Adorno, Spivak, Stuart Hall, bell hooks
First mainstream coverageJune 2013 feature in Critical-Theory.com on the “Commodify Them All” series
FormatLimited-run printed card sets, digital downloads, and fan-made expansions traded online
Core audienceGraduate students, humanities undergraduates, academic Twitter/X users, zine makers
Cultural reference pointModelled visually on 1990s Pokémon TCG aesthetics
Estimated active communitySeveral thousand collectors across Tumblr, Discord, and Bluesky as of 2026
Comparable marketPokémon TCG, which has returned roughly 3,821% cumulatively since 2004 per Card Ladder data
Academic interestCited in cultural studies syllabi at universities in the UK, Canada, and Australia
Why it matters nowReflects a wider hunger for tactile, shareable academic culture in an attention-fractured era

It is difficult to ignore the timing. With auction prices reading like fever dreams and a cumulative return of 3,821% since 2004, Pokémon cards themselves are experiencing one of their loudest moments in years, to the point where even sober investment writers are using the word “asset.” Observing this develop in conjunction with the theory-card revival makes one wonder what exactly consumers are looking for in a card at the moment. Something tangible, perhaps. A tradeable item. something that exists outside of an algorithm.

People I’ve spoken to seem to feel that the appeal isn’t really about Adorno or Derrida in particular. It’s about being a part of a distinct, small tribe. According to curators at the Smithsonian, Pokémon succeeded because it provided a common language for a generation. Theory cards perform the same trick, but on a smaller scale. Even if neither of you has completed A Critique of Postcolonial Reason, a humanities student across the room will understand exactly what you mean if you pull a Spivak from a pack.

Why Theory Trading Cards Are Having Their Pokémon Moment — and What It Means for Academic Culture
Why Theory Trading Cards Are Having Their Pokémon Moment — and What It Means for Academic Culture

Additionally, the academic culture that surrounds it is changing in ways that lessen the sense of randomness. Humanities departments are getting smaller. Tenure-track positions continue to decline. Group chats and Substack have replaced reading groups. A deck of cards begins to resemble a portable, somewhat rebellious little world in that setting rather than a gimmick. It is portable. A stranger could see it. You can debate who should have received a holographic.

It’s unlikely and probably irrelevant if this develops into anything like the Pokémon market. No one purchases a Lacan card in the hopes of retiring on it. However, there’s something telling about how identity, nostalgia, and scarcity have all come together here—the same forces that propelled the Pokémon boom, but in tweed. In a strange way, the franchise that taught one generation to catch them all has taught another how to gather ideas.

Whether the theory-card revival will endure or fade once the novelty wears off is still up in the air. Most likely a bit of each. However, the booster pack and the seminar reading list appear to be in conversation, at least for the time being. Additionally, the exchange is more fascinating than either of them by themselves.

Pokémon Moment
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Melissa Bridwell

    Melissa Bridwell is a Professor at Cambridge University and Senior Editor at theorycards.org.uk, where she writes about Theory Trading Cards, David Gauntlett's iconic sociology card series, and the thinkers who shaped modern cultural and media theory. Melissa brings both scholarly accuracy and sincere passion to every piece she writes. She has a strong academic foundation and a contagious enthusiasm for the nexus of ideas and collectibles. Her writing brings complex theory to life and makes it worthwhile, whether she is deciphering the philosophy behind a Foucault card or following Bell Hooks' cultural legacy.

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    About Us

    We are a group of writers, researchers, educators, and academic enthusiasts who think that everyone should be able to understand complicated concepts, not just those who have access to postgraduate seminars or university libraries. Our editorial focus lies at the nexus of media studies, sociology, cultural theory, and the surprisingly rich collecting culture that has developed around David Gauntlett's seminal educational card series since its inception at theory.org.uk in 2000.

    You've come to the right place whether you're a student discovering Foucault for the first time, a teacher searching for cutting-edge teaching resources, a collector searching for the AltaMira Press edition, or just someone wondering why a deck of cards with deceased theorists has become one of the most popular academic resources of the past 25 years.

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