Hegel was born on January 9, 1943, in
Goodrich, Michigan. He was inspired by the Soviet launching of the
Sputnik rocket in 1957 to study engineering. But once enrolled at
Michigan State University, he recalled later, he "discovered fairly quickly that it didn't matter how hard I studied calculus, I just couldn't understand it." Instead, he began to study Chinese, which he found "different, and much more difficult than I had imagined, but it was also fascinating", he said. "Chinese culture was unfamiliar, yet understandable — human interests and needs being pretty much constant around the world, after all." In 1965, he entered the graduate program at Columbia University using a
National Defense Foreign Language fellowship which supported him through coursework and a period of study in Taiwan. At Columbia he studied with
C. T. Hsia, who was turning his attention to the
classic Chinese novels. In Taiwan, Hegel took a supplementary job for the
China Airlines flight magazine, which he credits with getting him outside the library to learn about Chinese culture. While finishing work on his dissertation, he taught at
Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland from 1972 to 1974. At
Duke University, Durham, he was Visiting Associate Professor of International Studies in 1986 and Resident Director of the Duke Study in China Program for 1986. He joined the
Arts and Sciences at Washington University as Assistant Professor in 1975, and became Full Professor and Chair of the Department of Department of Asian and Near Eastern Languages and Literatures in 1986. ==Scholarly career and reception==