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53 pages 1 hour read

Ann Liang

I Am Not Jessica Chen

Fiction | Novel | YA | Published in 2025

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Symbols & Motifs

Paintings and Photographs

Paintings and photographs form an important motif in the book, reflecting The Relationship Between Appearance and Identity. The first of these to appear is Jenna’s self-portrait, which she flings paint at in frustration after not getting into Harvard. This happens on the same night that Jenna wishes she were Jessica Chen, with her wish coming true the next morning. Symbolically, the paint she flings at the portrait obscures her eyes in the portrait, signifying Jenna’s desire to cast away her own identity. As time wears on, the paint magically obscures more of her features, reflecting how Jenna is ceasing to exist in other people’s memories.

The deteriorating painting and Jenna’s existence itself are tied together in symbolism that is reminiscent of Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray. In Wilde’s novel, the protagonist keeps his youthful appearance alive while a magical self-portrait that is hidden away ages horribly. In a similar fashion, the longer Jenna continues to inhabit her new body, the faster the traces of her past self in the portrait begin to vanish. Jenna’s continued life and appearance as “Jessica” is thus sustained by the erasure of Jenna’s identity.

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