# Objet petit a {#objet-petit-a .reader-title}
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In the psychoanalytic theory of Jacques Lacan, '*objet petit a'*
(French for \"object little a\"; \"a\" for \"autre\", i.e. other) stands
for the unattainable object of desire, a projection or reflection of the
ego made to symbolise otherness, like a specular image, as opposed to
the big Other (written as capitalised \"A\") which represents otherness
itself. It is sometimes called the 'object cause of desire', as it is
the force that induces desire towards any particular object. According
to Alan Sheridan\'s note to his translation of *Écrits: A Selection*,
Lacan always insisted that the term should remain untranslated, \"thus
acquiring, as it were, the status of an algebraic sign\".^\[1\]^
Jacques-Alain Miller, Lacan\'s protégé, traces the idea back to Sigmund
Freud\'s *Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality*, out of which Karl
Abraham develops the notion of the \"part-object\", a concept further
developed by his student, Melanie Klein, which in turn inspired Donald
Winnicott\'s idea of the \"transitional object\".^\[2\]^
<div>
# Lacanian development {#Lacanian_development}
</div>
> The objet *petit a* is what falls from the subject in anxiety.^\[3\]^
--- Lacan
Mary Jacobus writes \'In Lacan\'s seminars of the late 1950s and early
1960s, the evolving concept of the *objet (petit) a* is viewed in the
matheme of phantasy as the object of desire sought in the other\...a
deliberate departure from British Object Relations
psychoanalysis\'.^\[4\]^
In 1957, in his Seminar *Les formations de l\'inconscient*, Lacan
introduces the concept of *objet petit a* as the (Kleinian) imaginary
part-object, an element which is imagined as separable from the rest of
the body. In the Seminar *Le transfert* (1960--1961) he articulates
objet a with the term *agalma* (Greek, an ornament). Just as the
*agalma* is a precious object hidden in a worthless box, so *objet petit
a* is the object of desire which we seek in the Other. The \"box\" can
take many forms, all of which are unimportant, the importance lies in
what is \"inside\" the box, the cause of desire.
In the Seminars *L\'angoisse* (1962--1963) and The Four Fundamental
Concepts of Psychoanalysis (1964), *objet petit a* is defined as the
leftover, the remnant left behind by the introduction of the Symbolic in
the Real. This is further elaborated in the Seminar *The Other Side of
Psychoanalysis* (1969--1970), where Lacan elaborates his Four
discourses. In the discourse of the Master, one signifier attempts to
represent the subject for all other signifiers, but a surplus is always
produced: this surplus is *objet petit a*, a surplus meaning, a surplus
of jouissance.
<div>
# # []{#Hierarchy_of_object_.28a.29}Hierarchy of *object (a)* {#Hierarchy_of_object_(a)}
</div>
> The object *a* is the form which lack assumes when it is
> *represented*. In truth, the object of desire is merely lack, void,
> which must be lacking in both the imaginary and the symbolic: which is
> to say, the real: \' *a* is of the order of the real\' (SXII:
> 5/1/66).^\[5\]^
--- Michael Lewis citing Lacan
Speaking of the \"fall\" of the *a*, Lacan noted that \'the diversity of
forms taken by that object of the fall ought to be related to the manner
in which the desire of the Other is apprehended by the subject.\'^\[6\]^
The earliest form is \'something that is called the breast\...this
breast in its function as object, *object a* cause of desire.\'^\[7\]^
Next there emerges \'the second form: the anal object. We know it by way
of the phenomenology of the gift, the present offered in
anxiety.\'^\[8\]^ The third form appears \'at the level of the genital
act\...\[where\] Freudian teaching, and the tradition that has
maintained it, situates for us the gaping chasm of castration.\'^\[9\]^
Lacan also identified \'the function of *petit a* at the level of the
scopophilic drive. Its essence is realized in so far as, more than
elsewhere, the subject is captive of the function of desire.\'^\[10\]^
The final term relates to \'the *petit a* source of the superego\...the
fifth term of the function of *petit a*, through which will be revealed
the gamut of the object in its -- pregenital -- relation to the demand
of the -- post-genital -- Other.\'^\[11\]^
For transference to take place, the analyst must incorporate the *a* for
the analysand: \'analysts who are such only insofar as they are object
-- the object of the analysand\'.^\[12\]^ For Lacan, \'it is not enough
that the analyst should support the function of Tiresias. He must also,
as Apollinaire tells us, have breasts\'^\[13\]^ -- must represent or
incorporate the (missing) object of desire.
Working through the transference thereafter entails moving \'beyond the
function of the *a\'*: the \'analyst has to\...be the support of the
separating *a*,\'^\[14\]^ so as to allow the analysis eventually to be
completed. \'If the analyst during the analysis will come to be this
object, he will also at the end of analysis not be it. He will submit
himself to the fate of any object that stands in for *a*, and that is to
be discarded.\'^\[15\]^
Slavoj Žižek explains the *objet petit a* in relation to the MacGuffin
in the films of Alfred Hitchcock: \"The McGuffin is clearly the *objet
petit a*, a gap in the centre of the symbolic order -- the lack, the
void of the Real setting in motion the symbolic movement of
interpretation, a pure semblance of the Mystery to be explained,
interpreted.\"^\[16\]^ In the 1996 documentary *Love thy symptom as
thyself*, Žižek argues that Lacan\'s principle was illustrated by a
crude television advert in which a woman kisses a frog, turning it into
a handsome man (echoing The Frog Prince fairy tale), at which point the
man then kisses the woman, who turns into a bottle of beer (his \"true\"
object of desire, and the subject of the advert). Humorously, Zizek
suggests: \"Maybe the ideal couple would be the frog embracing the
bottle of beer.\"^\[17\]^
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