Borders — civilizational, national, ethnic, regional, religious, phantom, ideological, spiritual, and others — and various understandings of transgression are a subject of interest across many disciplines in the humanities and social sciences. They have inspired the formation of numerous research teams and academic projects exploring these themes, as well as conferences that have resulted in monographs offering diverse interpretations of the topic. On October 3–4, 2024, the 4th International Conference “The Great World Religions in Language and Culture: Borders” was organized by the Institute of Russian and Eastern Studies, the Institute of German Philology and the Institute of Romance Studies at the University of Gdańsk. In this issue of Przegląd Rusycystyczny (Russian Studies Review), one will find selected papers presented at the conference by literary scholars and linguists representing various academic institutions, primarily from Poland and abroad. This publication aims to present a multifaceted and contemporary approach to the subject of borders through the lenses of linguistic, literary, and cultural studies. Researchers addressed the concept of the border not only in its literal sense — as a place or area near a boundary, across it, or in between — but also in a metaphorical sense: as a transitional or liminal state, between historical periods, religions, cultures, worlds, life and death, or even beyond the boundaries of known space-time. Furthermore, the border is also interpreted as the periphery concerning the centre.