Mirra Komarovsky (born February 5, 1905, Akkerman, Russia [now in Ukraine]—died January 30, 1999, New York, New York, U.S.) was a Russian-born sociologist, one of the first to engage in theory and research on the cultural and structural barriers to women’s equality and to write about problems men and women face because of their designated roles in American society.
Born in tsarist Russia to upper-middle-class Jewish, Zionist parents, Komarovsky and her family were subject to virulent anti-Semitism and ultimately were forced to immigrate to the United States in 1921 after the Russian Revolution of 1917 had made the upper and middle classes the enemies of the people. They joined other members of their extended family in Wichita, Kansas, but soon after moved to Brooklyn, New York. Komarovsky began taking classes at Barnard College in 1922 and after her first semester earned a scholarship to complete a bachelor’s degree (1926). She obtained a master’s degree in sociology from Columbia University in 1927 under the supervision of William F. Ogburn. Subsequently she became an instructor at Skidmore College and then a research assistant to Dorothy Swaine Thomas (the first woman president of the American Sociological Association) at Yale University. Komarovsky returned to Columbia in 1929, and, while working on a Ph.D. in sociology, she began teaching part-time at Barnard. In 1940 she published her first book (based on her dissertation), The Unemployed Man and His Family (1940), which illustrated the impact of job loss on American men’s authority and self-respect. After Millicent McIntosh became dean of Barnard in 1947 and recognized Komarovsky’s scholarship, Komarovsky became an associate professor in 1948 and full professor in 1954.
A decade before Betty Friedan (1963) wrote The Feminine Mystique, the book that triggered the second wave of the women’s movement, Komarovsky published Women in the Modern World: Their Education and Their Dilemmas (1953), which identified the structural and cultural factors that undermine American women’s aspirations and choices in professional and public life. Komarovsky criticized Freudian theory and showed how the problems women faced were not psychological but social and needed to be addressed as such. In 1964 she published her best-known book, Blue-Collar Marriage, which examined the problems of working-class husbands and wives. She was one of the first sociologists to address the social problems faced by men; in scholarly articles and in her book Dilemmas of Masculinity: A Study of College Youth (1976), she looked at the impact of the women’s movement on male seniors at Columbia in 1969–70. Her book Women in College: Shaping New Feminine Identities (1985) was based on a study she conducted at Barnard that analyzed 200 students’ outlooks on work, family, and men.
Although a staunch defender of women’s rights and a social critic of the stereotyping they faced, Komarovsky was never an activist in the traditional sense. She did not participate in organizations, but she did consult with such policy makers as Eleanor Roosevelt. Komarovsky was active in making women’s roles in American society—and the analysis of attitudes toward them—a legitimate part of the university curriculum.
After her mandatory retirement in 1970 at age 65, she continued to teach at Barnard and to engage in research and writing until 1992. She also served as chair of the newly established women’s studies department from 1978 to 1979. Komarovsky’s name and citations of her work are rarely seen in the literature on the sociology of gender or among the theorists cited among the classic works in the field. Yet her groundbreaking work on the sociology of sex roles and gender constructs formed the basis of much contemporary work on those subjects. She did achieve recognition for her contributions to sociology in 1973, however, by becoming the second woman to serve as president of the American Sociological Association.