Despite its many contributions to Los Angeles, the internally complex community of Armenian Angelenos remains enigmatically absent from academic print. As a result, its history remains untold. While Armenians live throughout Southern California, the greatest concentration exists in Glendale, where Armenians make up a demographic majority (approximately 40 percent of the population) and have done much to reconfigure this homogenous, sleepy, sundown town of the 1950s into an ethnically diverse and economically booming urban center. This article presents a brief history of Armenian immigration to Southern California and attempts to explain why Glendale has become the world's most demographically concentrated Armenian diasporic hub. It does so by situating the history of Glendale's Armenian community in a complex matrix of international, national, and local events.
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Fall 2017
Research Article|
November 01 2017
But Why Glendale? A History of Armenian Immigration to Southern California
Daniel Fittante
Daniel Fittante
daniel fittante is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at UCLA.
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California History (2017) 94 (3): 2–19.
Citation
Daniel Fittante; But Why Glendale? A History of Armenian Immigration to Southern California. California History 1 November 2017; 94 (3): 2–19. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/ch.2017.94.3.2
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