On any given Thursday afternoon, you’ll probably find the typical chaos in almost any sociology seminar at one of Chicago’s major universities: stacked readings, cold coffee, and someone still debating Durkheim. However, a new source of conflict has recently surfaced between the textbooks and tote bags: a trading card with C. Wright Mills on it, and it seems that no one wants to part with it.
It sounds almost ridiculous, the kind of thing you would write off as a novelty. However, there’s a feeling that what’s taking place here represents something truly intriguing about how students are currently interacting with sociological theory—not just through dense academic papers but also through tangible, collectible culture. For a few years, trading cards with thinkers, theorists, and historical figures have been discreetly circulating in academic and hobbyist communities. Eventually, Mills became the one that everyone desired.
When you sit with it, it’s not totally shocking. Mills was not merely a sociologist in the conventional sense of systems mapping. He was agitated, opinionated, and extremely wary of authority—qualities that are common among students who experience pressure from the outside world in ways they are still unsure of. When you’re twenty-two and trying to figure out why your circumstances feel so fixed, his concept of sociological imagination—the capacity to relate your own messy private struggles to the larger structures that subtly shape them—hits you differently.
Mills distinguished clearly between “personal troubles” and “public issues.” Losing a job is a personal issue for one person. The loss of employment for 14 million people is a social crisis and a systemic failure. Every time a student truly understands that distinction, which appears to be straightforward on the surface, it tends to land like something new. It seems that Mills was more interested in shaking people by the shoulders and telling them to look harder than in explaining society.

That urgency was made more acute by his Power Elite theory. According to Mills, a small, interconnected group of political, corporate, and military leaders controlled real power in America. These individuals moved between these spheres so effortlessly that the preferences of the average citizen hardly mattered. Depending on the week of the semester, you might find that convincing or a little suspicious. To be honest, it’s still unclear how much of his framework remains intact in the age of social media and shattered institutions. However, the fundamental query he poses remains.
According to the students’ descriptions, the card itself reflects some of Mills’ enthusiasm. It’s not a formal portrait, nor is it the type of picture that should be placed over a dean’s desk. It is said to feel more like a conversation than a commemoration due to its informal nature. It appears that one DePaul student declined to exchange it for two additional cards in a set, which is a significant statement in the tiny market of academic collectibles.
The card isn’t really what makes this noteworthy. That’s what the card indicates. Despite its significance, sociology occasionally finds it difficult to connect with students who are on the verge of their own lives. Mills resisted that distance every time. Sociological imagination, in his opinion, was a survival skill rather than academic furniture. He believed that everyone, not just professors with office hours and tenure, needed to be able to see how the context shapes their decisions rather than just living inside it mindlessly.
It’s difficult to avoid reading something significant into the little rivalry over a tiny piece of printed cardstock that is taking place in Chicago classrooms. Throughout his career, Mills argued that concepts ought to be relevant to actual people in actual situations. Students are literally fighting for the right to keep him in their pockets sixty years later. That equal parts would have likely been both structurally predictable and flattering to him.⁖※
