North Korea News Podcast by NK News - Ed Pulford: Discovering the city where North Korea, China and Russia collide
Episode Date: August 2, 2024Ed Pulford joins the podcast to discuss his new book “Past Progress: Time and Politics at the Borders of China, Russia, and Korea,” which examines the unique border area between the three countrie...s from various angles. He shares insights from his time in the Chinese town of Hunchun on the border with Russia and North […]
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Embark on a journey of discovery with NK News and Koryo Tours
as we proudly present the North Korea from a Distance Tour,
your window into the enigmatic world of the DPRK.
With travel to North Korea remaining uncertain,
our unique tour offers an unparalleled opportunity
to explore the nation from its periphery.
Designed for those who are keen to understand and observe North Korea, this tour is a comprehensive
exploration of critical inter-Korean sites.
Immerse yourself in a series of engaging tours along the border, interactive briefings and
insightful Q&A sessions with leading specialists.
Our tour is more than just sightseeing, it's an educational expedition that sharpens your perspective on the Korean Peninsula.
This is your chance to join a community of like-minded individuals,
from academics to policy enthusiasts,
all brought together by a shared interest in North Korean affairs.
Visit NK News or contact Koryo Tours to secure your place now
and gain a deeper insight into one of the
most closely watched regions in the world.
Don't wait, spaces are filling fast.
Hello podcast listeners and welcome to the NK News podcast.
I'm your host, Jack O's Wedsuit, and this interview was recorded on Wednesday, the 17th
of July, 2024.
And I'm joined by a stream yard from his home in England by Dr. Ed Pulford, who is an anthropologist
and senior lecturer in Chinese studies at the
University of Manchester. He has a new book, Past Progress, Time and Politics at the Borders of
China, Russia and Korea, which we will discuss today. Welcome on the show, Ed.
Thanks very much, Jaco. It's great to appear.
Now, your book, as I said in the introduction, it's called Past Progress,
Time and Politics at the Borders of China, Russia and Korea. Briefly, what's it about?
Well, I guess it's about how people from different countries across borders, between countries,
perceive their relationships with people on the other side of those borders in terms of
time, in terms of whether the people and the place that they look at across the border,
for example, the Tumen River border between China and North Korea, whether they perceive those people to be in the same sort
of time space, if you like, are those people behind us? Are they ahead of us? And I guess
this is a very widely held view. It's very common when people travel to different countries,
I think, for the perception to be that this place is more modern or more advanced or less modern or something than what might have been expected.
But I guess in socialist countries such as North Korea, China, or the Soviet Union, there's
a particular kind of intensity to how time has been part of identifying the state. And
so everyday people, in my view
and based on the fieldwork that I conducted
at this triple border, perceive the people
from across the border in very stark ways
to be from different periods of time.
And that's all the more stark, I think,
in the wake of the collapse of some of these socialist
projects.
I hope that's not too obscure a summary.
But basically, that's the theme.
And I guess the core question I'm trying to answer in many ways is why it is that people
are so taken, are so captured by this idea of progress, of forward movement.
Why it is that we understand our place in the world.
And again, it's not just people on the North Korea China border or anywhere else, but why
it is that so many people in the world understand themselves to be somewhere in a forward-moving temporal frame.
Yeah, okay. On the most practical level, is there actually a time difference, a difference in time
zones between the parts of Russia, China, and North Korea that meet? Yes, although there's more complexity than one might expect to how people cross these
borders and what time they end up adhering to. So the gap between that northeastern part of China
and the adjacent part of Russia varies depending on daylight savings and so on between two and
three hours. So again, that's a big difference when crossing a single short distance across the border, a huge leap
there two or three hours. Between Korea and China, there's
a one hour difference, I guess, these days or you know, that's
sort of the standard thing. But North Korea has, I think is
probably well known to many listeners played a little bit
with its time zone, including actually, as it would happen
during the period
when I was conducting my research about seven or eight years ago, when there was a sort
of half hour shift in 2015 to apparently, according to reporting, move away from being
on the same time zone as Japan, right, then got cancelled as far as I'm aware. However,
one of the cases that I highlight in this book is Chinese tourists
visiting North Korea. They don't bother with any kind of adherence to North Korean time, whatever
difference or otherwise there might be between China and North Korea. They just continue to
operate on Chinese time the whole time they're there. So I guess whether or not there does
exist a time is sort of immaterial to some people who are
crossing the borders.
Right.
And so we're talking for most of the time of your field work about this Chinese city
called Hunchun, which is on that sort of three-way border crossing between China, Russia and
North Korea.
Just give us a sense of what the borders between those three countries are like in that city of Hunchun.
Is it simply just like in Europe when you go from the Netherlands to Belgium
and you just cross a line and nobody pays any attention to it?
Or are there border guards at all three nations?
How does that work?
Yeah, well these are very sort of firmly inscribed, firmly defended and reinforced borders
and have been for quite a long time. The North Korea-China border,
I guess, has maybe in the longer term over many decades been a little bit more open than the one
between China and Russia. But I think we've seen quite clearly in the last few years that more and
more sort of reinforcement from both sides actually resulting from a combination of concern over
people leaving on the North Green side and concern over
people arriving on the Chinese side. That's that's led to a
certain amount of reinforcements. The Tumen River at
this point outside Hunshun as you mentioned, it's very
shallow, slow flowing, low key kind of border river. It's not
you know, the river actually forms the border at that point.
Is that right? That's right. Yeah. since the early 18th century. That's,
that's been the case, the Yalu on the west side and the Tumen
on the right hand side, right, both of them originating on
Pekdusan, on Changbai Shan, and that basically delineating the
border more or less consistently since 17, the 1710s. On the
Russia side of things, that's a newer border. Mid-19th century was when Russia sort of annexed that part of land
and brought its own territory all the way down to that triangular point,
Hunshun, which I should say is in this Yanbian Korean autonomous prefecture in northeast China.
Hunshun is the town at which points basically all three borders meet. And yet
from the mid-19th century, the Russians basically concluded a treaty with the Qing dynasty, the
Chinese government at the time. And that border, even after the sort of initial, I guess, conclusion
of that treaty, there was quite a lot of movement to and fro for quite a significant period
of time. But especially after the founding of the Soviet Union
in 1922, once the Bolsheviks got there
and sort of set up the Soviet state in this part of Russia,
the border became more and more firmly reinforced
and defended.
There's no obvious geographical marker right there.
There's a kind of reach.
There's no river.
There's rivers on much of the rest of the Chinese border,
actually, with Russia, further to the rest of the Chinese border actually with Russia
further to the north, the river Ussuri and the river Amur, but here it's a kind of line drawn
along a ridge that brings Russia all the way down to the point where it also borders Korea. Again,
that point of crossing with that small Tumen River bridge that I guess became a little iconic during the pandemic when some Russian diplomats
were leaving North Korea on a kind of hand-pumped cart with all their bags. That's the point where
Russia and North Korea join there. So you have quite distinct sort of the look of it is varied,
but it's quite a wild area as well. I mean, the town of Funchun is not very big,
not a huge number of people live right up to the border, but there are villages on all three sides that are pretty close to the borders. And is there a sort of a tourist magnet, a point where the three
countries meet, where, you know, like in some places in some countries and in some US states,
you'll find like there's a rock or a marker where people can stand
around and hold hands and one of them's in each country. Is that that kind of a thing there as
well? Yeah absolutely. I mean you don't have things like you know the world's biggest boot
made out of cheese or whatever novelty things appear on the side of highways in the US to
attract people but maybe you don't need that because actually the tourist sites that you've alluded to there is a little way to south east of the town
of Hunchun itself.
If you drive down about half an hour, 40 minutes or so from the actual town, you get to a place
called Fangchuan, Pangchang I guess is the name in Korean. And it has a platform, a kind of tower that you can climb
and overlook all three countries and see into that
neighboring parts of Russia, across the Tumen,
into the neighboring parts of Korea.
And I guess the big draw in many ways for tourists there too
is that you can see the Sea of Japan as it's called
in China or East Sea,
I guess for Koreans. Although I should say that actually Chinese Koreans call it Ilbonair.
They're not so bothered it seems by the nationalist claim to it not being the Sea of Japan that you
get on the peninsula. But the sea over to the east is mostly visible if it's a clear day, but that's not accessible to China
because Russia and North Korea come down
and kind of cut China's access to the Sea of Japan there.
So it's a nice view and it's become an increasingly
popular tourist destination on itineraries
that will take you maybe to Pekdusan,
and then to some other major sites in the area.
And then down to this little triple border point. It's worth a visit, I would recommend it. you maybe to Pakdusan, you know, and then to some other major sites in the area and then,
yeah, down to this little triple border point. It's worth a visit, I would recommend it.
Okay, but it sounds like that triple border point, it's all on the Chinese side, so I'm
guessing that you can't just sort of easily hop across the borders and say, now I'm in Russia,
now I'm in North Korea, now I'm back in China again. Is that correct?
That's absolutely right, Jacko. Yeah, it's a very kind of interesting situation that in microcosm,
in a very local setting, I guess, brings into focus the attitude that each country,
each state has to its national borders. Because on the Chinese side, it's, you know, it's pretty
free and easy, you know, there's kind of raucous groups of tourists having a great time getting
right down there. And you can really go right up to the line and the border.
You can see all kinds of artifacts of border drawing projects over the last couple of centuries.
There's border stones with the Russian side and also a kind of small museum about a battle
that happened there, the Janggofeng or Hassan battle that occurred there between the Japanese
Imperial Army and the Soviet Army during the 30s.
There's all manner of attractions that really pushed you
right up to the line where the new country starts.
On the Russian side, it's a heavily militarized
and basically zone of exclusion there.
You can't freely enter that neighboring part of Russia
unless you have a special permit.
You have to be either a resident there or somebody with special permission to go to the town of Hassan, which
is the adjacent town in Russia, because it's a sensitive area.
Obviously, it's the border with North Korea, with China, at the point at which North Korean
work teams and so on cross into Russia.
So there's no hint of any tourism really other than if you're able to organize a special trip to go and
look at, I don't know, some lakes with some nice, I don't
know, birds and stuff in it. There's also no real
infrastructure there for tourists in the unlike in China.
And then of course, on the North Korean side, I guess you're
looking across that on song county in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
book door. Well, I mean, we I guess we're looking across that Omsong county in Hamgyong, Hamgyong, Bukdo.
Well, I mean, I guess we're familiar with the tourist scene, perhaps listeners to this
podcast and people involved in its manufacture are familiar with how tourism to North Korea
works for local sort of tourists.
I guess there was probably a small industry, I would imagine, in some trips up there because there are a few local sites
that aren't so far from that point.
Things like Wangjiazhan Monument,
which is a little bit to the west of there,
where you can see this great big statue of Kim Il-sung
and his partisan fighters and so on.
And there's a museum also not so far,
I guess Huadong is not so far, the museum to Kim Jong-il's,
sorry, Kim Il-sung's mother and so on. So there's, you know, there's kinds of bits and bobs on the
North Korean side and that are taken in sometimes by tours undertaken by foreigners as well. But
yeah, I think it's a very, very different kind of, you know, environment on each side that really
reflects whether or not those countries
are confident in some respects about their borders or, you know, whether they
feel like they want random people, whether domestic citizens or foreigners or
anyone else sort of wandering right up to the edge.
Well, coming back to China, that's where you did your field work and that was
around what 2013 to 2015, right?
Roughly, yeah.
I mean, I've repeated visited since then a
number of times. But yeah, the kind of primary chunk of the
research that went into this book is, yeah, obviously
receding as many other things do into the into the times past.
But yeah, roughly around then. Yeah.
So I've heard and I've read from various sources that the ability
of foreigners to approach the border, that
particular border that you're talking about in Northeast China, but also other places
along the China and North Korea border, that that's not quite what it used to be, perhaps,
particularly during the pandemic, but even afterwards, there are some border areas that
foreigners are not allowed to go to. And you have to, you know, I have a Korean friend who went there who sort of pretended he was a local ethnic Korean
Chinese person, but of course that as soon as he was asked to show an ID, that
all fell apart. So I think things might not be as as they were when you were
there.
I think that's that's true. I mean, I think the trend in that direction
actually was already starting. It's interesting the case, the question as to whether the pandemic was kind of
major watershed in its own right.
And I think in many areas when it comes to, yeah, wandering around China's,
China's borders and crossing them and so on, it did change things quite
significantly, but actually, I think even before that, there was already some
increasingly sort of careful regimentation, organization of how people were allowed to move
around this space, even back in the mid 2010s, you know, even
going along the border, for example, between Hunshun and
Tumen. So sort of to the west, you know, you're basically there
is a road all the way along the bank of the River Tumen there,
which buses go along and so on.
There was increasing kind of monitoring of who was getting on those buses and so on,
even back in the 2010s.
And also when it came to that Fengquan tourist site, there was also a sort of
increasing regularization of tour groups and so on.
I mean, in the earlier days, I guess the early 2010s and so on, and certainly any longer ago than
that, you could really just go down there yourself, you could
get a taxi or some private transport right up to the tower
where you can go over and look at different countries. But
actually, already before the pandemic, they were starting to
try to collect people, put them in a car park that was back from the
actual tourist site itself and put them then on tour buses that meant that they were on a
more fixed itinerary and with these designated spots. Part of that, I think, was reacting to
the numbers that were increasingly going there. But yes, I do accept and well, I've seen and
heard and spoken to people that I still am in touch with in that area who have
seen that there is more concern over these things. And that itself is not unprecedented.
I mean, it wouldn't be totally accurate to say that all of China's borders all the way around
there are totally up for grabs in terms of going up to the very edge, far to the north of there.
For example, there's a border point
with Russia, where there's an island that was in dispute until the 2000s, which has
settled the, you know, the dispute has been settled and everyone agrees now which part
of the island is Russia and which is China in the middle of the river. But actually non-Chinese
citizens are not allowed onto the Chinese bit of that island. So it's not totally out of character
or unprecedented to have a North Korea specific thing, although obviously North Korea presents
certain particular challenges when it comes to how that border has been over many decades
back into the 90s and before that too.
Okay, so focusing on this large town or small city of Hunshun with about 230,000
people. It's in China, but you've got ethnic Koreans there, you've got some Russians across
the border. What was it like doing field work and which languages did you learn and speak while you
were there? Yeah, well, I had a background already in both in Chinese and in Russian, and that was
sort of where I came to it sort of from.
But in preparation for the actual research in Hunshun,
I did a year of Korean language at Yanbian University
in Yanji, the sort of capital is putting it a bit strongly,
but the main center of the Yanbian Korean prefecture
in that part of China.
So I joined a class of, you know, 30 or so local Chinese students and did intensive year basically their first year undergrad degree in Korean. So I was working on that while I was while I was there. And I lived there with a local
in Hunan once I started my fieldwork there properly. And yeah, I mean, it was a really incredibly interesting
period of time as I think you would probably imagine.
I mean, the kind of combination of languages
and cultures and so on there, I mean,
it jumps right out at you from walking around
the town of Hunan itself because it's in Yanbian,
all of the signs are in Korean already,
as well as in Chinese, because obviously it's China. But in order to sort of cater to Russian
people in the town, there's also a significant number of Russian signs. And basically, almost
every shop has all three languages, which, you know, it just even in a very non-academic or
serious way, it just looks great, because it three different scripts and it's all sort of all buttered up together. So, and actually that, you know, in many respects
reflects a kind of pattern of interaction that's going on there. There really is a significant
presence of all three groups. There are local ethnic Koreans, i.e. Chinese citizen Chosunjok,
who are, you know, a significant proportion of the town,
I mean, less and less.
I guess this is the story across the Yenbian over the last 30 plus years
in terms of migration to South Korea.
There was actually a new story at the very beginning of 2022, I think,
which indicated that there are now more Chosunjok in South Korea
than there are in Yenbian, which is a major sort
of turning point. I guess some of those numbers are a bit hard to pin down because people
are quite mobile and moving to and fro a lot. But anyway, there's still fluidity, people
are coming back and forth. Exactly. Yeah. So whether someone is actually fully in a place
is another question. But the population there is also significant and Chinese, also lots
of Russians. And, you know, navigating between Han Chinese, also lots of Russians, and navigating
between those different groups of people I found really interesting. What's the status of the
Russians there? Do they have Chinese citizenship? No, they're all visitors. They've all come across
the border temporarily. There are some people who are there longer term
studying or working and you know, there are Russian interests there that mean that, you know, it's not,
it's not sort of completely temporary. But I guess it's more common for Russians to be there
as temporary visitors for shopping or medical treatment or a whole bunch of other things,
which they do on a kind of regular basis. So they're not sort of permanent residents or people who are all there all the time,
but they often are very familiar with Hunshun and know it well because they come from just
across the border in many cases, not very far away geographically. And they come in
and spend a few days or a few weeks depending on what they're doing on a regular basis.
So they get, you know, they build up a lot of familiarity with
the place and with the town. So there's a kind of gradation there I guess of like temporary and
permanent people or people who are residents, local people are already from a variety of
different ethnic groups and then the outsiders that are there also includes, you know, some Koreans from both Koreas and a real kind of patchwork.
Well, now, as you know, we here at NK News, we focus almost exclusively on North Korea.
So why is doing fieldwork in Hunchun useful for people who are interested in studying and understanding the DPRK or North Korea better? Well, I think this is a time, in some ways, a time sensitive
question or one that has shifted over a period of time. I mean, certainly for quite a few decades
or a couple of decades, especially from the 90s and 90s into 2000s, Yonhapn was a place you could
come as an outside researcher or someone interested in North Korea and really encounter,
get a much storied rare glimpse of North Korean life, whether appearing across the
border or speaking to local experts in institutions in the MBN who had a kind of
depth of engagement with North Korea that was really
unmatched, including even in South Korea at that point, because actually people were able to freely
move to and fro or freely-ish. There was a lot of contact right up until the 90s and
just going to North Korea was a very common thing. So I guess you could get a kind of
understanding of society and of how things work there in that
period that was deeper really than many other places you might go for that. And in the absence
of the ability to do immersive kind of field work or research or surveys or anything like that within
North Korea. But I think the other thing that the NBN is sort of a fascinating case for is as a sort
of meeting point, it sometimes gets referred to as this sort of a fascinating case for is as a sort of meeting point.
It sometimes gets referred to as this sort of third career,
but it's also somewhere that combines North and South in quite interesting ways.
The course I studied on in the MBN University, for example, was called
Chosunmal, the major, the degree is referred to in that way.
But the course texts that we had referred to Korean as
hangul as hangul you so there was this kind of odd mix and that book that textbook was authored,
for example, by or produced by a publishing company actually way up north in Heilongjiang,
where there's another community of chosen joke, not in the not the nbn ones, but a different group
of Chinese Koreans. So actually,
the text in that book combined this local Korean satori, there's a local Korean speech, kind of,
you know, elements of that that were still, I guess, more formal and certain kinds of expressions
that might sound a bit awkward or weird in South Korea, but with lots of, you know, South Korean
influence. And that's something that has, you know, only intensified, I guess, you know, Genpeng in some ways is the first place that gets the Korean wave because it's outside Korea, but
it's open to all kinds of Korean cultural influence. And it's completely Korean speaking
or in many cases, Korean speaking. So there is a kind of amazing combination there of
South and North. So I guess in that sense, it helps you to sort of tease out what might be
what might be similar or different about those sorts of influences. But I think mainly that
the thing that I mentioned there at the beginning where you've got a large population of Koreans
there who, you know, have a much more sort of nuanced and complex view of North Korea as their
immediate neighbors, and people that they had a lot to do with until comparatively recently.
That's a pretty unique situation vis-a-vis North Korea-related research.
Now, I've read that through the decades, there have been times when, relatively speaking,
North Korea was an easier place to live in.
So some people from China crossed over the border to live in North Korea.
And then since at least the 1990s,
it's been the other way with North Koreans leaving to spend time in China. Did you talk
about these phenomena with your informants in Yanbian? Yes, absolutely. I mean, actually,
I think I probably learned about that situation from people I spoke to there in a way that I
hadn't previously appreciated. But, you know, the kind of position of those of Chosun
Chok within China has shifted considerably over time with political shifts that have gone on in
China. And that has coloured their attitude towards North Korea as a sort of alternative
or as a sort of other place that they might feel historically connected to. I mean, in terms of the
actual origins of that community, many know, many of them do have
some sort of family history not so far away just in what was Hamgyongdo before it got divided
into North and South. Although there's also a significant proportion of Yanbian Koreans who
come from Gyeongsando and places like further South actually in what is now the South. But I guess in
terms of, you know, how much attachments or otherwise they felt to
either place, well, in the early days of the PRC, the 50s, North Korea, the Chosunjo was
celebrated as kind of key socialist fighters against Japanese imperialism, people who helped
to bring communist power to the Northeast. So they had a high status and were really
allowed to govern their own affairs quite happily in Yanbian
from the 50s onwards.
And really a unique situation among minorities in China.
From the 60s, however, or mid 60s
and the cultural revolution,
there was a strong xenophobic kind of anti minority,
anti borderlands feeling across China.
And North Koreans at that point were very, sorry,
Chinese Koreans at that point were very sorry, Chinese Koreans at that
point were sort of stigmatized and attacked in a way that was common to lots of borderlanders.
At that point in time, North Korea had developed quite rapidly, you know, after the Korean War,
this Japanese industrial legacy and various other benefits that I guess were there, quite organized
Soviet style economy. And so compared to China's chaotic cultural revolution, North Korea at that point seems maybe an attractive
alternative to those to those Chinese Koreans who in many or
not many cases, it would be it would be an exaggeration to say
it was it was huge numbers, but significant numbers and people
who are relatives or, you know, people who the people I spoke
to knew, and were related to did move over the border there.
However, as you
mentioned, tides turn again and as things get worse in North Korea, China, as it sort of takes
off economically from the 80s and 90s, starts to seem a more appealing option, especially in the
wake of economic collapse and the kind of command economy kind of coming up short once the Soviet
Union is no more in the early 90s.
And so yeah, of course, we're familiar, I think, or many people will be with the North Korean famine into the early 2000s.
And that occasioned a huge number of people again, moving back in the other direction, too.
So there's been an enormous amount of sort of to and fro.
And I guess, you know, in terms to bring it right up to the present, I mean, what's most interesting to me and that relates to the previous answer or
the question about what we can be learned about North Korea there,
it's that actually this push pull and some of the division,
some of the increasing and reinforcements of borders and so on over the last 10 or
20 years has meant that oddly enough,
these Chinese Koreans and people living in this area now look at North Korea in a
way that's oddly similar to how a lot of the rest of the world views it as a kind of odd, far
away place, even though you can literally see it from the center of town in Hunshun.
You can see hills that are just over there, but they're in North Korea. But despite that
proximity, despite decades or centuries of ethnic mixing and commonality
language-wise and so on, actually people increasingly look at it as this sort of mysterious, odd
place.
And that is a real reflection, I think, of a kind of estrangement that has been produced
by, again, some of these historical forces between the two countries.
And there's also a much smaller group of ethnic Han Chinese who have lived in North Korea
called the the Hwagyo who presumably have the ability to cross borders as well. I think
they numbered now somewhere between five to 10,000. Were you able to meet any of them
during your time in Northeast China?
No, I haven't come across them there. I think I did bump into some in the lift at one point in a hotel
in Pyongyang or came across people with that background because they do seem to live an
interesting middle in between life in that context. But no, I didn't come across Huagyaw
in Northeast China. I would imagine that their most natural points of call in China itself are
probably a bit more mainstream because they're engaged in China related stuff. I guess there's
no reason for them in particular to go to Yanbian because there isn't that kind of ethnic
connection because they're Han Chinese. Well, I would imagine that the North Koreans that are in
Yanbian are, I guess, just a larger number of the kind of groups that you see elsewhere
in China, business people, dance and song troupes and people involved in those kinds of business,
quite significant numbers, people studying, of course, at Yanbian University and so on.
But that's, you know, those people are often in other parts of China too, just more in Yanbian.
So you were actually able to come into contact, unmediated contact with North Korean citizens in
Yanbian? Yeah, to an extent. There was a hotel that I used to visit quite often,
got made friends with someone who worked there who was a Russian, Veking, Han Chinese person who was,
I think that their parents ran the hotel. And, you know, I was a sort of honorary Russian for a lot of the time there.
Well, I mean, these days, you know, maybe it would be a mixed blessing.
But in any case, it was, you know, it was a sort of I was just sort of assumed to be Russian much of the time.
And so some of the friends I made among kind of local Chinese people were often kind of through some sort of Russia related connection. And this friend of mine there, that
hotel had a resident Korean dance troupe who played there and
who they'd sort of hang out in the in the bar and you know, the
restaurant in the hotel and so yeah, got some you know, some
level of chatting to them. Again, my sort of whatever anthropological
or research-based instincts,
you slightly try to moderate your desperate desire
to delve into the ins and outs of someone's deep subjectivity
when they're in a situation that,
of course, is probably not gonna be,
it's not so easy for them to interact with some random English person or indeed some random Russian person
if that's what I was assumed to be. So yeah, I would don't want to over egg my, you know,
incredible insights into into life for those people. But I did, you know, I got to know
it got to know people well enough. And that definitely fed into my, my research and how
I understood the relationships that relationships across those borders.
Now from their founding and through their history, both the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and
the People's Republic of China, while both being notionally or at least nominally socialist countries,
they've trod different paths, different versions of how to achieve socialism, that socialist utopia
that they're both dreaming of. Could you talk a little bit about that?
Yeah, I think that is that sort of returns us actually to this kind of core interest
I have in this book in how projects which have in common this allegiance to socialism,
as you've said, and therefore to a kind of shared trajectory towards this utopian idea somewhere in the future,
also diverge and also basically are constructed
and carried out within kind of national containers,
like within the borders of those states.
This, I guess, in my understanding
and in my sort of, some of what I write in the book
is partly a function of there being projects that have an inheritance back to this
Stalinist idea of socialism in one country, the idea that
socialism after Lenin and Stalin actually was no longer this
borderless utopian idea that mean everyone or working people
across the world would unite regardless of ethnic or
national affiliation and so on. There was this sort of pragmatic, I guess, project and in the Stalin case ended up being a very,
you know, of course, brutal and harsh authoritarian project to construct a socialist
system within the borders of a country. And I guess, you know, Chinese and Korean incarnations
of that are, you know, in some respects have a sort of formal resemblance to that in the sense that they are one
country socialism for China and for North Korea. Now, slightly
different, I guess, from the Soviet Union, or at least in a
different way, each project is also very concerned with
national liberation and post-colonial or post-imperial,
you know, projects of getting out of that kind of domination by
either Japan and, of course, earlier, and at the same time, European Western colonists. So I guess
that's something that in broad terms is shared. But the distinction, for example, between how to
construct this socialist project in a massive post-imper imperial space like China,
where you have dozens of different ethnic groups,
languages, all kinds of different ways of doing things,
you know, what Marx or Marxist thinking would think of as
different modes of production, different peoples considered
according to this progressive view of history, who are
thought of being on different stages of some sort of
historical trajectory towards a socialist or communist utopia versus the North Korean case, which
certainly a huge amount of effort has been put into constructing that as a single, as a mono-ethnic,
mono-cultural, broadly, state. Those are quite distinct kinds of projects. And I think the
Choson job, because they sort of strad, this case, they are in some ways attached to and implicated in the
North Korean socialist project, which is this powerfully mono ethnic, largely
focused on Japanese colonialism project, and the Chinese one, which is by by
virtue of China's sort of status as a multi ethnic exnic ex-empire, they're part of this other thing
which is a much more kind of plural and complicated thing.
I think they act as a great sort of bellwether
or case study for trying to see what it means,
including what it means to be Korean and socialist
over time in quite different national contexts.
So that's a sort of angle that I'm interested in here.
And there's a Soviet Russian angle to that too,
although, perhaps less immediately,
Jermaine, the NK News podcast.
Indeed.
So when the ethnic Koreans in Hunchun
look over the river at North Korea
and they're thinking about progress
and socialism and backwardness.
What are their thoughts? How do they describe North Korea to you? What they're seeing?
Yeah, it's an interesting mix of things, I think, because it won't come as a surprise to anyone who's familiar with China today,
that younger people in this region are not sort of died in the world ardent socialists per
se, you know, they I think they they don't necessarily take seriously a lot
of the official Chinese government messaging and the idea that this is
somehow a socialist project in some kind of, you know, very doctrinaire
archetypal way from past decades. Although there is still a utility in
joining the Chinese Communist Party
and being part of those structures, isn't there?
There absolutely is, yeah, and in some senses that speaks to the kind of national character
of the Chinese socialist project, I think, that actually the incredible structural complexity
of this sort of still somewhat Stalinist 1950s model of socialist statism overlaid on a Chinese already complex
hierarchical society. That's still all the iconography or the language around that.
And Xi Jinping has been someone who's doubled down on socialism, communism, Marx, Engels,
blah, blah, blah, and he talks about it all the time. But in terms of what, quote unquote, real,
or what socialism actually is, is aiming for.
Maybe that's a bit less a concern of many people.
But I think the relationship with North Korea is still seen as a sort of one mediated through this shared socialist past and different fates since that project sort of started to change in the 90s.
And so certainly older older people, including the granny and the family that I lived with in Hunshun,
still think of actually people of that generation still do largely think of China as a sort
of socialist place in contradistinction to Western capitalist places and kind of look
on North Korea positively as a sort of still as a what's called in Chinese a shong di guo
jia like a brother socialist brother country.
And so there is a kind of still, you know, still alive that kind of
nostalgia, but they also look at it as a place that has, you know, that is backwards, that has
sort of failed to change its socialist model. And that that's in some ways reflects on people's sort
of, you know, the Koreans there, that they're kind of innate character somehow, they just haven't
seemed to get it together. The other, I mean, just as a slight aside, the other really interesting thing
that I heard quite often in how people describe North Korea was using a term, fungjian, which means
feudal, like they will often sort of categorize North Korea as a feudal country, which is odd.
I mean, it's not maybe not totally wrong, given the sort of power structures and so on that are so obvious in North Korea, but fengjian, more feudal than China, is also a kind of curious mix.
And so this sort of language, you know, it's really embedded in people's cross border perceptions.
And again, this comes back to the sort of overarching theme of what I'm interested in,
how people look at those relationships in terms of the language, the iconography, the kind of frames of analysis that people have. You know, these aren't academics,
they're just regular people, but they still sort of have this socialist inflected way
of perceiving things, not to make them seem like some kind of totally other impossible
to understand group of people, but it plays a role in people's lives, unsurprisingly.
Yes. Now, since the personal is political, how does the proximity of the people of
Yanbian and particularly in Hunchun to the DPRK influence how they think about
the DPRK and its international relations in an everyday way?
Yeah, well, that element too is, I think, quite interesting. I mean, again, I think there's an element of generational
distinction here among among the MBN Koreans in how they would sort of look on North Korea's
global orientation. Although, you know, I think in in the kind of much more recent frame of the last
the last few years and increasing tensions with with China and the United States or a kind of broader understanding that there might be
greater sense of stress and division between China and other countries. I think there's a kind of
admiration, not to put it too strongly, but people are sort of impressed at North Korea's
incredible stubbornness, if you like, in that sense. I mean, there's definitely people who are like, look at that, that those guys are really doing something serious, you know, we might not agree with it, but you've got to you've got to hand it to them. They are, in a way really doubling down on their whole project to resist anything of that of that nature. But I think, yeah, the kind of still now, the idea that people, you know,
can cross borders. And of course, as we mentioned earlier, going to South Korea and elsewhere in the
world has been a very important part of Joseon-jok lives now for 30 years or more. And so that idea
that openness, kind of mobility and the kind of connectedness to other places is a significant
feature of how people understand themselves and understand their society. So again, to
look at North Korea through that lens, that people feel great sympathy with Koreans there,
in some ways people that they might feel nostalgic about from a sort of co-ethnic or kind of
sense of shared history perspective, but
the idea that those people are a bit trapped, I think is also a
factor in how they how they look at North Korea. So it's a kind
of a mix there of, you know, some sort of reluctance,
admiration, and then a kind of sympathy, along with along with
a bunch of other things, including, as I mentioned
earlier, a sort of confusion as to why don't those guys just reform their economy like we did and sort themselves out?
It sounds like that also goes some way to explaining the enduring popularity of North Korean restaurants in China.
Yeah, I think there's a booming industry and a lot of this sort of nostalgic stuff. I mean, those North Korean restaurants and the
kind of performances that you can enjoy there, you know, as you
as you eat your, your rinmian or whatever, the coding of that and
the kind of aesthetics of it's a very familiar, they feel
adjacent to a lot of the Cultural Revolution era, songs
and dances and so on that, you know, again, older generations within China sort of still appreciate and feel
a nostalgia for whether it's actually because of socialism or
any kind of actual connection to the political projects, or
whether it's, you know, just a sort of more generic nostalgia
for simpler times, or whether it's a personal nostalgia for
people's youths, people are nostalgic for their youth,
whether it was living, I don't know, as a witness in the UK, whether people who prefer to think
of their youth as being in some sort of simpler, easier UK to live in, or whether they were
living in Maoist China, it almost doesn't matter. I think people are quite naturally
inclined to be nostalgic. So those restaurants, I think cater to a variety of both sorts of ideologically flavored things and
just general and now for a younger generation, as I said, who look on North Korea is increasingly
mysterious and weird and sort of exotic in an odd way. You know, there's something a bit sort of,
you know, edgy about about going to this place and like,
what are they doing? It's just so nuts. So I think they've got to market there
for a variety of different reasons. When were you last in Hunshun or in Yanbian?
I haven't been since the pandemic, actually, sadly. I've only been to China once since the pandemic at all. So 2019, I guess, was the last time. I imagine you might still have ongoing
contact with people who live there today, even though you haven't been there yourself?
Yeah, I'm still in touch periodically with people from different backgrounds and different,
I guess, in different walks of life there. And in a sense, the border effects of the pandemic
were very, very harshly felt by people there
who previously were relying on tourist business,
for example, that obviously completely dried up
or were involved in cross-border trade.
All the Russians that lived there basically had to go.
And Chinese people involved in border trade with Russia or to a sort of slightly lesser
extent, but also things like seafood to North Korea and other sorts of things.
They really struggled and had to find other things to do, kind of batten down the hatches
and grit their teeth through that period.
So I think from what I've learned, things are kind of starting cautiously to resume their former tempo, at least vis-a-vis the Russian side of things.
But as I think you've already discussed, and you've brought it up a number of times on the
pod, I think, when will people be allowed to come and go? And of course, Russia, China are likely to
be the first places that, and already are a bit bit places that people can go to from to into North Korea from Apparently the full spigot on letting Chinese tourists
back into North Korea hasn't been turned on yet.
Yeah, I think that's an interesting one.
I guess partly that may be a function of managing scale.
I think there were never that many Russians.
There was always a flow and going out to Wonsan
to go to the beach or, you know, even around
Chongqing or these various places. There's, you know, there's kind of, I guess, a sort
of trial element to that. But I think, you know, it's not to kind of try to take cases
of tourism to analyze much more complicated, intricate diplomatic things, but sort of classic
vein of playing China and Russia or China and the Soviet Union off against each other
a little bit. I suppose now, as we've witnessed over the last few weeks, Russia is somewhere
that North Korea is quite happy to be buddying up with at the moment. And, you know, why
not give it a go? I mean, this stuff, you know, has played out and been evidence around the border as well for decades,
you know, right back to the 70s and the 80s when Kim Il-sung was sort of navigating his way between the two communist superpowers.
So maybe it's not so unexpected to find that it reflects itself in tourism as well today.
Yeah, it is. It's fascinating to watch. the world and it reflects itself in yeah in tourism as well
today. Yeah, it is. It's
fascinating to watch and I can
totally understand the the
interest for you and why you
picked that area to do your uh
your field research uh that
brings us to the end of our
interview today. I'd like to
recommend to listeners if
they're interested in knowing
more to check out your book
past progress time and politics
at the borders of of China,
Russia, and Korea. Are you on Twitter? No, not in any kind of overt or active way.
I sometimes look at it and I usually regret it. I understand. I've more or less gone inactive on it
myself. But we will include a link to your page at the University of Manchester in the show notes
so people can find you. So thanks once again for coming on the show, Ed Pooleford.
Thanks very much, Jaco.
I really enjoy speaking to you.
Keeping up with South Korea's fast-paced developments just got easier.
Welcome to the Korea Pro podcast, your weekly briefing on the stories that matter.
Hosts Jongmin Kim and John Lee dissect topics from diplomacy to technology, ensuring you're
always informed.
Our episodes are a must for professionals in and out of Seoul.
Subscribe on your preferred platform and elevate your understanding of Korean affairs. Pro Podcast, where clarity meets depth.
Ladies and gentlemen, that brings us to the end of our podcast episode for today.
Our thanks go to Brian Betts and Alana Hill for facilitating this episode
and to our post-recording producer genius, Gabby Magnuson, who cuts out all the extraneous noises, awkward silences, bodily functions, and fixes the audio levels. Thank you and listen again
next time.