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UCIAS
Institute of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies
Berkeley Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies
University of California, Berkeley

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Weaving Shuttles and Ginseng Roots: Commodity Flows and Migration in a Borderland of the Russian Far East
Tobias Holzlehner, University of Alaska, Fairbanks

The author is grateful for the Mellon-Sawyer Postdoctoral Fellowship at the Berkeley Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies and a Wenner-Gren dissertation fieldwork grant, which made the different stages of this research possible. He would like to thank all the members of the BPS contemporary politics working group for their valuable comments and suggestions, especially Edward (Ned) Walker and Regine Spector for their time and work spent editing different versions of the paper. All shortcomings are the sole responsibility of the author.

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ABSTRACT:
The breakdown of the Soviet Union has transformed the Russian Far East into an economic, national, and geopolitical borderland. Commodity flows and labor migration, especially from China, have created both economic challenges and opportunities for the local population. The article investigates the intricate relationships between commodities, migration, and the body in the borderland between the Russian Far East (Primorskii Krai) and northeastern China (Heilongjiang Province). Small-scale trade and smuggling in the Russian-Chinese borderland represent an important source of income for the local population. Especially tourist traders, the so-called chelnoki who cross the border on a regular basis, profit from the peculiar qualities of the region. The article explores how border economies entangle bodies and commodities on both material and conceptual levels. Chinese commodities and economic activities shape local perceptions as the experience of local Russians with migrant workers from China is mediated through encounters at open-air markets and regular shopping sprees to neighboring China. The intimate entanglement with the border and its commodity flows means that perceptions of, and involvement in, cross-border commodity flows are experienced in a very corporeal form. Chinese labor migration into the Russian Far East is perceived as a threatening consumption of one’s own land, population, and resources. The economic and social interchanges in the Far East blur the boundaries between objects and people and at the same time connect the economic actors to the unique geography, flora, and fauna of this borderland.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Tobias Holzlehner, "Weaving Shuttles and Ginseng Roots: Commodity Flows and Migration in a Borderland of the Russian Far East" (September 1, 2008). Berkeley Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies. Paper 2007_09-holz.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/iseees/bps/2007_09-holz

 
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