Coser was a prominent sociologist who could expand and reconceptualize theoretical frameworks. She pushed and deconstructed paradigms of functional theory, role theory, and modernism to explain complex processes. Her work was always driven theoretically, and even with those substantive, she could evoke the patterned behaviors and institutional frameworks of issues that she dealt with: she crafted and refined institutional analysis, provided conceptual tools for the dissection of social problems. After receiving her Ph.D. in sociology from Columbia University, Rose Coser worked there as a
research associate. She then moved on to do research at the
University of Chicago. In 1951, Coser first was an instructor and then became an assistant professor at
Wellesley College where she stayed for eight years before moving on to the department of
psychiatry at the
Harvard Medical School as a research associate. After her time at Harvard, Coser became an associate professor at
Northeastern University. In 1968, both Lewis and Rose Coser became professors at the
State University of New York (SUNY) and worked there until retirement. Coser's most prominent works Include: • “Anti-Semitism Re-examined,”
The New Leader (1951). • "Social Problems 4," (1956). • “Authority and Decision-Making in a Hospital,” (February 1958). • “Laughter Among Colleagues: A Study of the Social Functions of Humor Among the Staff of a Mental Hospital,”(February 1960) • "Life in the Ward," (1962). • "In The Hospital in Modern Society," (1963). • "A Case Study in a Mental Hospital," (1976). • "Structure and Functions", 1964 and 1974. • “Evasiveness as a Response to Structural Ambivalence,” (August 1967). • “Women in the Occupational World: Social Disruption and Conflict,” with Gerald Rokoff (1971). • “On Nepotism and Marginality,” (1971). • “The Principles of Legitimacy and Its Patterned Infringement,” with Lewis A. Coser. In
Cross-National Family Research, edited by Mavin B. Sussman and Betty Cogswell (1972). • "The Family: Its Life Cycle and Achievement in America," (1972). • “The Housewife and Her Greedy Family,” with Lewis A. Coser. In
Greedy Institutions, edited by Lewis Coser (1974). • "In The Idea of Social Structure" (1975). • "Training in Ambiguity: Learning Through Doing in a Mental Hospital," (1979). • "Access to Power: Cross-National Studies of Women and Elites," (1981). • “The American Family: Changing Patterns of Social Control.” In
Social Control: Views from the Social Sciences, edited by Jack P. Gibbs (1982). • "In Defense of Modernity: Complexity of Social Roles and Individual Autonomy," (1991). • "Women of Courage: Jewish and Italian Immigrant Women in New York," (1999).
In Defense of Modernity: Complexity of Social Roles and Individual Autonomy, 1991 In Defense of Modernity: Complexity of Social Roles and Individual Autonomy was Coser's last published book. The book is about modern society as a supportive environment for individualism against the traditional, superstitious, and repressive constraints. == Awards and honors ==