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The Price of Identity

Dave White’s Sell Yourself (July 1, 2024) and Kiana Jimenez’s poem Self-Worth are two sides of the same haunting reflection on value, commodification, and the cost of existence. Together, they dissect the ways in which the human self—body, spirit, and identity—is broken apart and appraised by a world eager to consume.
The illustration presents a fragmented human form: eyes, lips, ear, hand, and bone scattered across the page. Interspersed with coins and bills, these parts are not whole, but reduced to objects of trade. The skeletal bone in the center grounds the composition with a chilling reminder of mortality, fragility, and how identity can be stripped down to its barest frame. The handwritten phrase “Yourself Short” completes the piece, both a warning and a lament of undervaluing one’s worth.
The poem Self-Worth gives these fragments a voice. In it, the speaker sells off parts of themselves—eyes for a penny, lips for a nickel, ears for a dime, hands for a quarter, bones for a dollar—each transaction a hollow attempt to find meaning in being. Yet at the end, when even the body is sold, the soul is found to hold no worth in the eyes of others.
“Finally my bones for a dollar I sold to the earth,
But as for my soul—There was found no worth.”
Together, artwork and poem create a piercing commentary on how society reduces people to what they can offer, how easily we internalize that transaction, and how devastating the cost of such bargains can be. Sell Yourself becomes the visual counterpart to the poem’s verses, an anatomy of loss and commodification, while Self-Worth transforms the visual fragmentation into lived pain and voice.
This pairing challenges us to ask: What is our true worth? And how often do we, knowingly or unknowingly, sell ourselves short?
Ledger of the Lost
Ledger of the Lost — A digital download pairing Kiana Jimenez’s Self-Worth with Dave White’s Sell Yourself, exploring fragmentation, commodification, and the hidden costs of survival.
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