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Table of Contents
Introduction
Narratives of discord: misinformation, dissimulation, truth
Voices from Below. Propaganda and Petitioning Power in Late Socialist Romania (Mioara Anton)
The Great Discursive Divide in Communist Romania (Veronica Manole)
Words that Must Not Be Named: Narratives of Language, Power, and Identity in Communist Romania (Rka Lugossy)
Compromise or Survival. Adapting the Religious Discourse and the Topics Covered in Publications of the Romanian Orthodox Church during the Communist Regime (Clin Emilian Cira)
The Founding Texts of a Revolution. Romania 1989 (Kazimierz Jurczak)
Words at war: expressive forms of resistance, dissidence and protest
The Language of Inner Freedom for Dissent: Mller and Liiceanu before and after the Revolution (Jonathan Lahey Dronsfield)
The Rhetoric of Albanian Insurgency: Communism and Anti- Communism in Kosovo (Henrique Schneider)
The Change of Worlds and Words. The Language of Protest during and after the Romanian Revolution in 1989 (Dina Vlcu)
Written, spoken, performed: archiving the memory of (post-)communism
Humility and Hatred, Forgiveness and Hope. A Linguistic Approach on the Subjective Literary Experiences in the Romanian Communist Society (Maria-Zoica Eugenia Balaban)
Retrieving Memory via Desk-Drawer Literature: from Reality Escapism in Stories about Cadmav to Contemporary Reflective Writing in With My Womans Mind (Ioana Mudure-Iacob)
Surviving the Change, Adjusting the Language. Romanian Writers in the Cultural Media, December 1989-1990 (Magdalena Rdu, Oana Fotache)
The December 1989 Revolution in Post-Communist Romanian Drama (Anca Haiegan)
Staging Communism in Romania: Language, Propaganda, Memory in Caryl Churchills Mad Forest and Matei Viniecs How to Explain the History of Communism to Mental Patients (Alina Cojocaru)
The Language of the Velvet Revolution versus the Anti-Language of Post- Communist Crime. A Sociolinguistic Analysis of Contemporary Czech Crime Historical Television Series (Lubo Ptek)
Surprising Silence? Possible Reasons for Scarcity of Representation of the Velvet Revolution in Czech Film Adaptations in the 1990s (Radoslav Hork)
Comparing the Portrayal of the Fall of the Berlin Wall in Two Spanish Newspapers: A Multimodal Analysis (Samira Allani, Silvia Molina-Plaza)
Borghesia and Laibach against the Socialist Regime of Yugoslavia: Insights from a Socio-Linguistic Analysis (Mitja Stefancic)
Conclusions.
Narratives of discord: misinformation, dissimulation, truth
Voices from Below. Propaganda and Petitioning Power in Late Socialist Romania (Mioara Anton)
The Great Discursive Divide in Communist Romania (Veronica Manole)
Words that Must Not Be Named: Narratives of Language, Power, and Identity in Communist Romania (Rka Lugossy)
Compromise or Survival. Adapting the Religious Discourse and the Topics Covered in Publications of the Romanian Orthodox Church during the Communist Regime (Clin Emilian Cira)
The Founding Texts of a Revolution. Romania 1989 (Kazimierz Jurczak)
Words at war: expressive forms of resistance, dissidence and protest
The Language of Inner Freedom for Dissent: Mller and Liiceanu before and after the Revolution (Jonathan Lahey Dronsfield)
The Rhetoric of Albanian Insurgency: Communism and Anti- Communism in Kosovo (Henrique Schneider)
The Change of Worlds and Words. The Language of Protest during and after the Romanian Revolution in 1989 (Dina Vlcu)
Written, spoken, performed: archiving the memory of (post-)communism
Humility and Hatred, Forgiveness and Hope. A Linguistic Approach on the Subjective Literary Experiences in the Romanian Communist Society (Maria-Zoica Eugenia Balaban)
Retrieving Memory via Desk-Drawer Literature: from Reality Escapism in Stories about Cadmav to Contemporary Reflective Writing in With My Womans Mind (Ioana Mudure-Iacob)
Surviving the Change, Adjusting the Language. Romanian Writers in the Cultural Media, December 1989-1990 (Magdalena Rdu, Oana Fotache)
The December 1989 Revolution in Post-Communist Romanian Drama (Anca Haiegan)
Staging Communism in Romania: Language, Propaganda, Memory in Caryl Churchills Mad Forest and Matei Viniecs How to Explain the History of Communism to Mental Patients (Alina Cojocaru)
The Language of the Velvet Revolution versus the Anti-Language of Post- Communist Crime. A Sociolinguistic Analysis of Contemporary Czech Crime Historical Television Series (Lubo Ptek)
Surprising Silence? Possible Reasons for Scarcity of Representation of the Velvet Revolution in Czech Film Adaptations in the 1990s (Radoslav Hork)
Comparing the Portrayal of the Fall of the Berlin Wall in Two Spanish Newspapers: A Multimodal Analysis (Samira Allani, Silvia Molina-Plaza)
Borghesia and Laibach against the Socialist Regime of Yugoslavia: Insights from a Socio-Linguistic Analysis (Mitja Stefancic)
Conclusions.