The films of Abbas Kiarostami confront the questions of cinematic representation, identity, and the relationship between cinema and everyday life in eloquent and imaginative ways. Through a
close examination of Kiarostami’s formal and narrative strategies in his films, notably Taste of Cherry, The Wind Will Carry Us, Close-Up and Ten, this innovative book works against the grain
of auteurist readings of Kiarostami’s films to explore global circulation and the controversy over censorship’s role in the cinema. It grounds his films firmly within the historical context of
Iranian national cinema, revealing the ways in which the reception of films across multiple sites can contribute to how national narratives are articulated locally and globally. It traces
Iranian national cinema’s self-reflexive narration of its own history and how, in the process, it positions itself as a major player in the construction of national consciousness.