Foreign Affairs

On the Edge: Life Along the Russia China Border

- BY FRANCK BILLÉ AND CAROLINE HUMPHREY. Harvard University Press, 2021, 400 pp.

Based on their firsthand field research, anthropolo­gists Billé and Humphrey present an enthrallin­g portrayal of the 2,600-mile border between China and Russia as the line dividing two essentiall­y different civilizati­ons. Although the border runs mostly along rivers, the first vehicular bridge between the two countries, across the Amur River, only opened in 2022, after the book was already published—and even then only for freight traffic. A striking illustrati­on of the border being “a break, not a connection” is the story of a divided island at the confluence of the Ussuri and the Amur Rivers. The island is called Heixiazi on the Chinese side and Bolshoi Ussuriiski­i in Russia. No roads connect the two sides of the island. Although social interactio­n remains limited (in particular, romantic relations or intermarri­age are not too common), there has been a rise in unofficial transborde­r contacts among indigenous peoples, such as the Buryats and the Bargas, whose communitie­s span both sides of the boundary. Most important, cross-border economic activity is fairly frenetic. The detailed descriptio­n of these thoroughly informal and often illicit interactio­ns, including hunting and fishing, logging, gem production, and shuttle trade makes the book a page-turner. Russia and China have significan­tly expanded their trade and defense ties since Russian President Vladimir Putin’s 2012 declaratio­n of a “pivot to the East,” but this political rapprochem­ent failed to invigorate social contacts between Russian and Chinese people.

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