With one of the highest corruption rates of EU countries, Bulgaria has experienced economic turmoil and widespread political cynicism. Instead of emigrating, as many of their peers have done, the Ranobudnite Studenti, translated as ‘the Early Rising Students,’ protested against government corruption by occupying Sofia University and through street demonstrations during 2013-2014. The Ranobudnite Studenti demanded government transparency and a "true democracy" for the betterment of Bulgaria’s future, constructing a community of university students separate and distinct from the government. This ethnographic research of the Ranobudnite Studenti protest movement seeks to understand cultural formations and identity politics of post-communist Bulgaria as it struggles to become part of the European community. Through qualitative methods of semi-structured interviews with the Ranobudnite Studenti, participant observation of their group gatherings, and media and discourse analysis of social media, this research asked what are the ways the Ranobudnite Studenti exerted their agency, their ability to reshape the world around them. I analyze the events, practices, and symbolic-performative aspects of their protest movement, demonstrating how the Ranobudnite Studenti constructed and embodied a politically viable and authoritative identity in order to invoke the support of Bulgarian citizens. I divide this identity into two categories - today’s enlightened patriots and the children of the transition - through which the students asserted their role both as the leaders of the Bulgarian people and the future, the primordial heirs, of Bulgaria. The students constituted their constructed identity as the moral opposition to the government by representing politicians as illegitimate criminals and hypocrites who hinder Bulgaria from progressing towards Western standards of modernity. Through the construction of their identity, the students represent "the nation" and democracy as embedded in the people rather than the government.