Book

Torn between two lands: Armenians in America, 1890 to World War I

Harvard University Press (7) • Published In 1983 • Pages: xii, 364

By: Mirak, Robert.

Abstract
This is a comprehensive study of the Armenian American community in the United States from approximately the 1890s to World War I (1914). The book is divided into four major parts. Part I surveys the Armenian communities in the Ottoman Empire (Turkey). Part II describes the origins and character of the Armenian migrations to the United States, comparing them to similar and dissimilar features of the migrational movements of southern, and eastern European and Middle Eastern populations of the same time period (ca. 1890-1914). The general nature of the Armenian immigrants' economic, physical, and social adjustments to urban America is discussed in Part III. Part IV describes the Armenian American struggle to help their countrymen against the oppressive regimes in Turkey and Russia. The concluding section traces the steps by which the community became acculturated to the New World (pp. vii-viii). Of particular interest in this book is the detailed analysis given to the Armenian revolutionary parties in the United States -- their formation, organizational structure, fund raising techniques, propaganda activites, and their resort to terrorism (dust jacket).
Subjects
External migration
History and culture change
Household
Political parties
Congregations
Religious denominations
culture
North American Armenians
HRAF PubDate
1996
Region
North America
Sub Region
Regional, Ethnic and Diaspora Cultures
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Historian
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 1995
Field Date
1965-1983
Coverage Date
1890-1914
Coverage Place
United States
Notes
Robert Mirak
Includes bibliographical references (p. 344-354) and index
LCSH
Armenian Americans