Rees Geoffrey
Department of Religion, Health, and Human Values, Rush University, Chicago, IL, USA.
J Med Humanit. 2013 Jun;34(2):109-21. doi: 10.1007/s10912-013-9212-1.
Although the clinical and the sexual are commonly treated as antithetical realms of experience, queer commentary teaches that the clinic is a positively sexual space and that clinical intimacy is a creative form of sexual intimacy. Contrary to writers such as Engelhardt, the clinic is a space where queer publics are forged, and the barriers between moral friends and moral strangers potentially dissolve, but only to the extent that one is disposed to allow oneself to enjoy experiences of identification that confound the ideals of human dignity typically invoked in writings about sexual ethics on the one hand and clinical medical ethics on the other hand.