Komarovsky's dissertation topic, which she stumbled upon in 1935 through a research position with mathematician
Paul Lazarsfeld at the New York
Institute for Social Research, was “The Unemployed Man and His Family." She earned her Ph.D. in
Sociology in 1940 from
Columbia University because of this work. Later published as a book,
The Unemployed Man was an intensive study of fifty-nine families in the qualitative sociological method. Komarovsky built her legacy on researching the social and cultural attitudes of families. Much of her work focused on the idea of “
cultural lag,” in which the cultural attitudes surrounding women generally lag behind technological and social advances. Throughout the rest of her career, she continued to study the role of women and the outlooks of society towards those roles. She became one of the first social scientists to look critically at gender and the role of women in society. In 1973 and 1974, she became the second woman after
Dorothy Swaine Thomas ==Personal life==