The topic of this dissertation, broadly conceived, is the connection between death, culture and politics. It pursues this connection in two ways: through an examination of contemporary antimodern critique, and through a study of ancient Greek political thought. What both Greek thinkers and contemporary antimodernists share is a critical engagement with heroism, understood here as a way of interpreting mortality such that it yields a standard for measuring the value of actions and institutions. For contemporary antimodernists, the major trends of modernity--rationalization and social differentiation, in particular--render death either incoherent or insignificant. The failure to make sense of death has not just psychic costs, but ethical and ...