ELTE BTK Angol-Amerikai Intézet | |
Established | 1886 |
---|---|
Director | János Kenyeres |
Students | 1,500 |
Address | 8 Rákóczi út , , 1088 , 47°29′40″N 19°03′41″E / 47.49444°N 19.06139°E |
Campus | Urban |
Language | English |
Website | btk.elte.hu |
The School of English and American Studies (SEAS) of the Faculty of Humanities of the Eötvös Loránd University was founded in 1886 as Department of English Language and Literature and it is located in Rákóczi út in Józsefváros, Budapest, Hungary.[1] Along with the Department of English of the University of Vienna, the School of English and American Studies is one of the biggest English departments in Central Europe.
In 1886, Ágoston Trefort, the Minister of Religion and Education between 1882 and 1888 and the President of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences between 1885 and 1888, asked and commissioned Arthur Patterson to teach English language at the Hungarian Royal University.[2][3]
In 1898, Arthur Yolland became the lector and later a teacher at the Hungarian Royal University.
In 1924, Antal Szerb, Hungarian writer, obtained a degree in teaching English and German languages at the Department of English Language and Literature.
In 1937, Miklós Szenczi established the lectorate that was financed by his own salary from 1941.[4]
From 1945, László Országh taught at the department for a couple of years.
In 1947, the Institute of American and English Studies was established.
In 1947, Miklós Szenczi was appointed as the Director of the Department of English Language and Literature. However, he was removed from his position in 1949 due to political reason. In the same year, Miklós Szenczi was the appointed as the director of the institute. However, in 1948, the short-lived institute was dissolved due to political reasons.
Tibor Lutter was appointed as the head of the Department of English in 1949 and he led the department until 1956. In 1957, Miklós Szenczi was reinstated as the head of the department.
In 1990, the department was relocated to Ajtósi Dürer sor in Városliget, Zugló, Budapest.
After the end of communism in Hungary in 1989, Russian language was not anymore obligatory to learn at primary and secondary schools. Therefore, the demand for English education increased exponentially. As a response for this demand, the Centre for English Teacher Training was established in 1990.[5]
In 1990, Péter Medgyes founded the International Association of Teachers of English as a Foreign Language-Hungary in order to facilitate communication among teachers and share useful methods and techniques in teaching English.
In 1994, the School of English and American Studies was founded since the department was unable to handle the increasing number of students.
The early 2000s saw several changes at the Eötvös Loránd University. The Faculty of Teachers' Training College (in Hungarian: Tanárképző Főiskolai Kar) was dissolved and the SEAS continued the teacher education. First, a separate department was created for the teachers' education, led by Zsuzsanna Tóth. However, this separate department was dissolved and later the Department of English Language Pedagogy was founded.
In 2007, the School of English and American Studies was relocated to the Trefort Campus (Józsefváros) in Rákóczi út. In this way, all of the institutes of the Faculty of Humanities could be found at the Trefort Campus.
In 2011, the SEAS celebrated the 125th anniversary of its foundation by publishing a book entitled 125 éves az angol szak.[6]
In 2013, anti-semitic stickers were placed by vandals on the doors of the instructors.[7] The SEAS also expressed their concert with antisemitic provocation.[8]
In 2017, the SEAS expressed its solidarity with the Central European University.[9]
On 16 September 2022, Tibor Frank, former director of the SEAS and member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences,[10] died after a short illness.[11][12][13]
In 2023, Imre Salusinszky, Australian journalist, political adviser, and English literature academic, was a vsiting scholar at the Department of English Language Pedagogy.[14]
The management consists of the director and two deputy directors.[15]
Title | Name |
---|---|
Director of Institute | János Kenyeres |
Director for Scientific Affairs | Éva Illés |
Director of Studies | Krisztina Szécsényi |
School Secretary | Dániel Cseh |
Department/Institute | Heads/Directors |
---|---|
Department of English Language and Literature (1886–1994) | Arthur Patterson (1886–1889) Arthur Yolland (1908–1946) Miklós Szenczi (1947–1949) Tibor Lutter (1949–1956) Miklós Szenczi (1957–1967) László Kéry (1967–1973) László Báti (1973–1978) Péter Egri (1978–1983) Aladár Sarbu (1983–1990) Ádám Nádasdy (1991–1992) Veronika Kniezsa (1992–1994) |
Group of American Studies (1990–1994) | Zoltán Kövecses (1990–1994) |
Centre for English Teacher Training[16] | Péter Medgyes |
Directors of institute (1994–) | Tibor Frank (1994–2002) Géza Kállay (2002–2006)[17] Ágnes Péter (2004–2005) Tibor Frank (2006–?) Géza Kállay (2010) Tibor Frank (2011–2014) János Kenyeres (2015–) |
There are 5 departments at the School of English and American Studies.
Department | Acronym | Head |
---|---|---|
Department of American Studies[18] | DAS | Zoltán Kövecses (1994–1997) Enikő Bollobás (1997–?) János Kenyeres |
Department of English Applied Linguistics[19] | DEAL | Dorottya Holló (1994–2005) Edit Kontra (2005–2014) Kata Csizér (2014–2019) Enikő Öveges (2019–) |
Department of English Linguistics[20] | DELG | László Varga Ádám Nádasdy (1997–2004) Miklós Törkenczy (2004–2011) Péter Szigetvári (2011–2023) | (1994–1997)
Department of English Language Pedagogy[21] | DELP | Péter Medgyes (1994–1996) Christopher Ryan (1997) Péter Medgyes (1998–2002) Éva Major (2002–2005) Uwe Pohl (2005–2010) Krisztina Károly (2014–?) |
Department of English Studies[22] | DES | Ágnes Péter (1994–1997) Ferenc Takács (1997–2000) István Géher (2001–2005) Győző Ferencz (2005–2009) Judit Friedrich (2009–?) Ákos Farkas (2014–2019) Zsolt Komáromy |
There are one bachelor and two masters programmes at the SEAS.[23]
Level | |
---|---|
Bachelor's degree | English and American studies |
Master's degree | English |
American studies | |
Teacher education | teachers’ BA-cum-MA (OTAK) |
Doctor of Philosophy | American Studies Doctoral Program (AMER) Medieval and Early Modern English Culture and Literature Doctoral Program (AIKK) Modern English and American Literature and Culture Doctoral Program (MODA) Gender in English and American Literature and Culture Doctoral Program (GEND) English Linguistics Doctoral Programme Language Pedagogy and English Applied Linguistics Doctoral Program |
The following festschifts have been published:[30]
The following is a list of the researchers based on Google Scholar.[36]
Citations | Researcher |
---|---|
10000–50000 | Kata Csizér (DEAL),[37] Zoltán Kövecses (DELG)[38] |
5000–10000 | Marcel Den Dikken (DELG),[39][40] |
1000–5000 | Péter Siptár (DELG),[41] Mark Newson (DELG),[42] Ildikó Lázár (DELP)[43] |
500–1000 | Tibor Frank (DAS),[44] Péter Szigetvári (DELG)[45] |
100–500 | Ágnes Albert (DEAL), Brigitta Dóczi (DEAL), Krisztina Károly (DELP),[46] Enikő Öveges (DEAL),[47] Gyula Tankó (DEAL), László Varga (DELG),[48] |
The School of English and American Studies organises four-five conferences annually:[49]