Kevin Adamson
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Sergiu Florean
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Discourse and power
The FSN and the mythologisation of the Romanian revolution
in The 1989 Revolutions in Central and Eastern Europe
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In the period since the Romanian revolution of December 1989, a significant body of scholarship has accumulated that seeks to identify the causes and consequences of the events within the broader context of the East European revolutions of 1989. This chapter sheds light on how the National Salvation Front (FSN) sought legitimacy, forged symbolic power, mobilised support, produced consent and diminished opposition. It focuses on three aspects of the FSN's revolutionary-discursive strategy. It analyses the portrayal of Nicolae Ceausescu that demonises him and his entourage as enemies of the Romanian people. The chapter looks at the attempt to depict a symbiotic relationship between the people and the FSN, based on a common opposition to Ceausescu. It looks at the construction of the FSN as a revolutionary agent, charged with the responsibility of creating a new regime that emanated from the popular uprising.

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