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Part-object

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part-object (objet partiel) According to Melanie Klein, the infant's
 
underdeveloped capacity for perception, together with the fact that he is only
 
concerned with his immediate gratifications, means that the subject begins by
 
relating only to a part of a person rather than the whole. The primordial part-
 
object is, according to Klein, the mother's breast. As the child's visual
 
apparatus develops, so also does his capacity to perceive people as whole
 
objects rather than collections of separate parts (see Hinshelwood, 1989: 378-
 
80).
 
While the term 'part-object' was first introduced by the Kleinian school of
 
psychoanalysis, the origins of the concept can be traced back to Karl Abra-
 
ham's work and ultimately to Freud. For example, when Freud states that
 
partial drives are directed towards objects such as the breast or faeces, these
 
are clearly part-objects. Freud also implies that the penis is a part-object in his
 
discussion of the CASTRATION COMPLEX (in which the penis is imagined as a
 
separable organ) and in his discussion of fetishism (see Laplanche and
 
Pontalis, 1967: 301).
 
The concept of the part-object plays an important part in Lacan's work from
 
early on. Lacan finds the concept of the part-object particularly useful in his
 
criticism of object-relations theory, which he attacks for attributing a false
 
sense of completeness to the object. In opposition to this tendency, Lacan
 
argues that just as all DRIVEs are partial drives, so all objects are necessarily
 
partial objects.
 
Lacan's focus on the part-object is clear evidence of the important Kleinian
 
influences in his work. However, whereas Klein defines these objects as partial
 
because they are only part of a whole object, Lacan takes a different view.
 
They are partial, he argues, 'not because these objects are part of a total object,
 
the body, but because they represent only partially the function that produces -
 
them' (E, 315). In other words, in the unconscious only the pleasure-giving -
 
function of these objects is represented, while their biological function is not
 
represented. Furthermore, Lacan argues that what isolates certain parts of the
 
body as a part-object is not any biological given but the signifying system of
 
language.
 
In addition to the partial objects already discovered by psychoanalytic
 
theory before Lacan (the breast, the faeces, the PHALLUS BS imaginary object,
 
and the urinary flow), Lacan adds (in 1960) several more: the phoneme, the
 
GAZE, the voice and the nothing (E, 315). Thesgobjects all have one feature in
 
common: 'they have no specular image' (E, 315). In other words, they are
 
precisely that which cannot be assimilated into the subject's narcissistic
 
illusion of completeness.
 
Lacan's conceptualisation of the part-object is modified with the develop-
 
ment around 1963-4 of the concept of OBJETPETITA as the cause of desire. Now
 
each partial object becomes an object by virtue of the fact that the subject takes
 
it for the object of desire, objet petit a (Sll, 104 From this point on in his
 
work, Lacan usually restricts his discussion of part-objects to only four: the
 
voice, the gaze, the breast and faeces.
 
 
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