Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to provide a living tribute to the leading autoethnographer, Alec Grant.
Design/methodology/approach
Alec provided Jerome with a list of names of people he might approach to write a tribute on his behalf.
Findings
The accounts describe the influence that Alec has had both as an educator and as a trusted colleague for the people approached.
Research limitations/implications
While this is a living tribute, it is about one man and could, therefore, be described as a case study. Some people wonder what can be learned from a single case study. Read on and find out.
Practical implications
Alec has carved out a path for himself. In many senses, he chose “The Road Less Travelled”. He has never shied away from challenging “The System” and defending the rights of the marginalized and socially excluded. It is not a road for the faint-hearted.
Social implications
For systems to change, radical thinkers need to show the way. “Change keeps us safe” (Stuart Bell).
Originality/value
Alec was a well-known and highly respected cognitive behavioural academic practitioner and the author of key textbooks in the field. He then decided to reinvent himself as an autoethnographer. This has brought him into contact with a much more diverse group of people. It has also brought him home to himself.
Subject
Health (social science),Pshychiatric Mental Health,Psychiatry and Mental health
Reference23 articles.
1. Seeing the psychiatrist: an autoethnographic account;Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing,2007
2. The case of the trump regime: the need for resistance in international nurse education;Nurse Education Today,2017
3. Drinking to relax: an autoethnography of a highland family viewed through a new materialist lens,2018
4. Moving around the hyphens: a critical meta-autoethnographic performance,2018