Maureen Ellis is a senior research associate at University College London and associate lecturer at The Open University, UK.
"""The deep and rigorously academic contributions to this collection of essays present some of the issues both from the point of theory and practice. The value of the book to linguists and teachers is that the essays expand the application of language and semiotics as applied to language and symbols and extend it into the arts and social and political organisation. It is a book of essays in which we can follow our interests, be they primarily political, social or linguistic, or all three. The underlying message, however, is clear: we live in a world that is under threat and only by understanding our different societal symbols, interpreting them and recognising the commonalities lying beneath can we move forward to a sustainable future."" From Cassidy, M. (2019). Critical global semiotics: Understanding sustainable transformational citizenship (a review). Training, Language and Culture, 3(4), 68-70. doi: 10.29366/2019tlc.3.4.8 ""Maureen Ellis’s volume, Critical Global Semiotics: Understanding Sustainable Transformational Citizenship is unique and greatly needed, bringing together semiotic theory and scientific methodology, all in such a way as to improve both theory and methodology while outlining pathways for improving our world. The book does several things very well: right from the beginning, Maureen Ellis, in her “Introduction” and “Conclusion” to the volume, as well as in her editorship of the volume’s sixteen contributions, serves to operationalize Thomas A. Sebeok’s global semiotics. In so doing, Ellis and her contributors employ the fields of Critical Realism (CR) and Systemic Functional Semiotics (SFS) as frameworks for “understanding sustainable transformational citizenship”; thus Critical Global Semiotics is born."" W. John Coletta & Ryan T. Polacek in The American Journal of Semiotics 37.1–2 (2021), pp. 141–155."