Where Do Political Signs Go When We’re All Stuck Inside?

Tobias Carroll
4 min readOct 5, 2020

September 2020 kicked off with political signs in the headlines. In this case, though, the headlines weren’t about billboards or signs punctuating suburban subdivisions. Instead, they focused on the Biden/Harris campaign developing virtual signs that could be placed near your virtual residence in Animal Crossing: New Horizons. Go where the people are, evidently — though much like the 2004 Bush/Cheney campaign’s infamous online sign generator, this does leave plenty of room for would-be pranksters to engage in acts of politically-inspired mischief. But the fact that a major party’s Presidential ticket is seeking real estate in the world of virtual real estate helps to illustrate the fundamental strangeness of this year’s election — and all the events that accompany it.

The process of researching and writing Political Sign made me think a lot about the ways in which we interact with the spaces around us. This comes with the territory described in the book: after all, it doesn’t make a lot of sense to put political signage in a place where it can’t be seen, regardless of what form it takes. One of the arguments I put forth in the book is that what we think of as a political sign goes far beyond a billboard, a bumper sticker, or a yard sign. Even so, one of the critical elements of a political sign is an audience, even if it’s a small one.

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Tobias Carroll

Writer of things. Managing editor, Vol.1 Brooklyn. Author of the collection TRANSITORY and the novel REEL.