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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 10 page paper looks at the Korean population in L.A. and its contribution. Koreatown and its history are included. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA745Kor.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Angeles is Koreatown, with its thousands of Korean businesses: mom-and-pop curio stores, multinational banks, tiny storefronts, gleaming glass buildings. Upwards of 300,000 Korean Americans live in or near Koreatown1." Things
have changed since then. There is a combination of positive and negative events that have come upon the Korean community. On the positive side, it is a tight knit community
that helps one another out. On the other hand, there is racial tension in L.A. Los Angeles is quite a unique city with a variety of cultures. While some cultures
collide with the Koreans, the group has, by and large, done fairly well. There are stories of very successful Koreans, but there are also stories of exploitation. As with any
analysis on an urban community, there is the idea that the bad has to be taken with the good. For the Koreans there are a variety of situations that plague
the community, but as a culture, the Koreans have contributed much to Los Angeles. II. Los Angeles Before embarking on how Korean culture affects Los Angeles,
and vice versa, it pays to take a look at this famous California city. It is a city that is considered to have the largest population in the country2. It
was founded in 1781 and was actually an outpost under both American and Spanish rule; the region would experience a population explosion after railroad service was installed in 18763. Los
Angeles did receive rail service, but at the time, it did not have much industry4. However, it did have many amenities. It has a desirable climate and land area and
this would draw people to the city5. By 1890, the population of L.A. had grown quite a bit, and there were one and a half million people by 19406.
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