At a regional sociology conference in Ohio last fall, a folding table was acting strangely somewhere between the free coffee station and the keynote hall. People were pausing there. Not momentarily, but really pausing, creating a loose but genuine line, and removing wallets. There were piles of trading cards on the table. Not collectible game cards or sports cards, but cards with illustrated portraits of Auguste Comte, Émile Durkheim, and W.E.B. Du Bois staring back. To put it simply, it was an odd and oddly captivating sight.
Nowadays, sociology trading cards are increasingly common at academic conferences, and the response has been more positive than most would have imagined. A photograph or illustration of a theorist, a few biographical details, and a signature one-liner summarizing their significant contribution to the field are usually included on the cards. Small, collectible, and strangely endearing. It appears that what began as a format for classroom assignments has crossed the line from student exercise to adult enthusiasm thanks to open educational resources and platforms like Lumen Learning.

This might have been inevitable. In the original assignment, students were instructed to investigate sociologists in the same manner that a sports fan investigates athletes: by looking up personal information, odd life incidents, and the theory’s color. As the assignment itself points out, early sociologists led truly dramatic lives marked by poverty, mental illness, and political exile. Using a trading card format to present that accomplishes something that a textbook hardly ever does. It gives people a sense of familiarity with the individual.
Academics seem to grasp the allure of distilling a complex thinker into a few key facts more than the general public. They’ve worked in lecture halls for entire careers doing just that. However, compared to a PowerPoint slide, holding a physical card—something with weight and edges—seems to elicit a different reaction. It was more like observing people at a record fair than it was observing academics as they went through a stack of cards at a conference booth, comparing notes on which theorists they had already gathered.
People are drawn to sports cards for reasons other than nostalgia, such as education, identity, social connection, and even mild addiction, according to research on the subject. These reasons don’t seem to be specific to athletics. At a recent conference, a graduate student acknowledged that she had returned to the table twice: once for herself and once, she claimed, “for a colleague who couldn’t make it.” Whether that was totally accurate is still up for debate.
This minor trend is actually fascinating because of what it reveals about how academic culture views engagement. Sociology struggled for decades to make its complex texts, abstract frameworks, and arguments understandable without a lot of background. Although a trading card doesn’t address that issue, it raises an important point: a face, five facts, and one well-written sentence could be the discipline’s most honest entry point.
Scholarships won’t be replaced by cards. At these conferences, nobody believes they are. However, they’re creating an opportunity for strangers to engage in conversation, find common ground, and debate whether Weber’s card understates his range—something that many conference programming subtly fails to do. It’s difficult to ignore the fact that sociology as a discipline has consistently claimed to be attempting to accomplish that.
