(here, in a
Los Angeles jail circa 1949), subject of co-written memoir with Isserman Isserman's first job after completing his dissertation was a replacement position for a semester at
Oberlin College in fall 1979, followed by replacement positions at
Hobart and William Smith Colleges and then back to Oberlin. He settled into
Smith College from 1982 to 1988, followed by temporary positions at
Mount Holyoke College and
Williams College. During this period, a debate broke out over the character of American communism, and Isserman's book was one of several criticized by
Theodore Draper's two-part attack on the "new history of American Communism" in
The New York Review of Books. As the debate heated up, Isserman criticized books by Draper's protégé,
Harvey Klehr. Isserman returned to the theme with a chapter on the history of the CPUSA's "destalinization crisis" in his second book on the emergence of the New Left,
If I Had a Hammer in 1987, and in his co-authored work with Healey,
Dorothy Healey Remembers, in 1990 (reissued in paperback as
California Red). Isserman secured a tenure-track position at
Hamilton College in 1990 as the James L. Ferguson Professor of History. After the debate over American communism, Isserman shifted his focus to the history of conflicts between left and right during the 1960s in his book with Michael Kazin,
America Divided: The Civil War of the 1960s, now in its third edition. He wrote a prize-winning biography of America's best known socialist of his time,
Michael Harrington, leader of the
Democratic Socialists of America. In 1997, Isserman received a
Fulbright grant to teach American Political History in
Moscow State University in Russia. Beginning in 2008, Isserman has written several books and articles about
mountaineering in the Himalayas and in the United States. He has also written a history of Hamilton College for its bicentennial in 2012. Isserman has participated in an exchange at the
University of Sussex in fall 1985, a Mellon fellowship at
Harvard University, 1992–1993, a
Fulbright Distinguished Professorship at
Moscow State University in 1997, and an exchange at
Pembroke College,
Oxford University in 2001. == Political views ==