Kanji Amnesia And Why It’s Okay To Forget Kanji

In a couple hours at 1:40pm Pacific Time, I’ll be live on BBC Radio (sorry, no idea which one… people tell me it’s probably #4, though) talking about “Character Amnesia” (or for us Tofugu-folk, “Kanji Amnesia”), so I thought a good way to get my ducks in a line would be to write a post about it… That way, hopefully, I won’t forget what I want to talk about it.

What Is “Character Amnesia” (Kanji Amnesia)?

Basically, people in Japan (and China) are using computers, phones, and other electronic devices so much that they’re forgetting how to write their kanji. Thanks to these things, there’s almost no reason to write something using your hands. Think about it, when’s the last time you hand wrote anything? For a lot of you, I’m guessing it was either to sign a receipt (or you just can’t remember). The world is revolving around our phones and computers, which means we’re typing… a lot.

It’s the exact same thing with Japanese, but with Japanese, you’re taking something really a lot more complicated to write (kanji) and making it a lot simpler. All you have to do nowadays is write the sounds that make up a word in Japanese, and *poof!* automagically your electronic device shows you the most likely kanji match to the thing you wrote out. If it’s not the first match, there’s usually quite a few others which you can choose from. This means the emphasis of being able to write kanji is nearly nonexistent in real life. All you have to do is be able to recognize a kanji and be able to read it. Literally half the work of written communication has vanished, and I think it’s awesome.

For those of you who don’t have much experience with kanji (if you want to learn, check out the kanji section of TextFugu for a way to learn kanji that actually makes sense), here’s a good parallel. With English (I know this from experience), spell check has made it so I don’t have to know how to spell things. Misspelled something? Red underline tells me to change it (thanks!). Once I start writing by hand, I definitely notice all the things I don’t know how to spell (anymore) that I probably learned in middle school. Take this example and multiply it by a billion, and you have the Kanji/Japanese issue. They can recognize the kanji. They can read the kanji. They can type the kanji… but, when it comes to writing a lot of kanji by hand, expect there to be a lot of mistakes and omissions.

To Be Honest, This Is Awesome

A lot of old school Japanese teachers will probably tell you otherwise. I was one of them not too long ago, until I started writing TextFugu, and started seeing what I could remove to make the lessons simpler. When I asked “what is pretty unnecessary 90% of the time?” I realized that the ability to write kanji by hand was one of them. So, I cut that requirement so that people can focus on much more important things (like being able to read… and type the kanji).

Even Japan is admitting to this. They’re going to add nearly 200 kanji to the required kanji learning list for kids because so many kanji have become a lot more common through use of typing the characters (i.e. a lot of characters that were tough to write by hand, but became common because they’re really easy to type out). On top of that, Japan is totally a cell-phone culture. Everyone seems to have a cell phone, and everyone seems to be typing away at it. It’s just so much easier to communicate in this way, and handwriting is becoming a thing of the past.

So, in summary, I don’t think this is a bad thing, especially for language learners out there. It just (once again) supports that the ability to hand write kanji is becoming increasingly unimportant. That means you can start focusing your limited efforts (everyone has limits, so you need to make the most of them!) on doing much more important things, whatever that may be. I think that’s amazing news. You have permission to spend your time learning things that you’ll be able to use a lot more commonly :)

So what do you think? Any of you experienced this? I’ve definitely become terrible at hand writing kanji (embarrassingly terrible, actually), but on the other hand, it’s so easy to type kanji out that I have almost no reason to hand write anything. The cool thing? When I do have to hand write something, I just type it up first so I can use that as a reference… I hope any impending apocalypses don’t take away my cell phone, or I’ll be screwed.


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  • Haiheli

    That is exactly what I have been thinking all along (but didn’t dare to say so far). I am learning Japanese on my own, at a slow pace, so I wondered whether it would be worthwhile trying to write the kanji when after some time I have already forgotten to write them. It’s an endless task. When I write Japanese it’s on my mac. So easy. And without the prospect of ever living in Japan why would I need to be able to write in Japanese?
    Thanks for your article. It sure does lighten my heart.

  • http://twitter.com/SerenadedAbyss Zakuto

    Thank you Tofugu for this lovely article. It has renewed my confidence in trying to learn kanji and gives me the slight chance to be a little lazy about it…

  • http://twitter.com/tmrdrgz Tom Rodríguez

    Well it all comes down to what your goals are ultimately, so if you’re not planning on living there and writing out Japanese it’s fine but personally I think it’s just lazy, and I like things to look nice so when I do write out stuff, I want it to look like it how it should be written; for example I don’t want to write out 日 by drawing a rectangle then a line through it, I want it to look pro, so for me writing is very important :D

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1807892445 Maxime Savard

    For myself I think writing Kanjis is a verry good and effective way to memorize them, but I see how this [handwriting] is indeed becoming a thing of the past…

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Do you do handwriting stuff a lot? I think that’s more my point, that people don’t write with their hands anymore (I know there’s exceptions to this, but for the most part, I believe it’s true, and becoming truer). I think it’s probably nice to learn how to write by hand properly, but just think about all the things you COULD be learning instead of learning to write by hand, then you could come back and work on that later.

  • へいせい

    I love writing kanji by hand. It makes me feel good. They’re not just a jumble of lines, they’re a jumble of history, a much bigger and older jumble than Latin alphabet. It makes me feel like I’m participating in that history, if only a little. Plus, they’re really beautiful if written skilfully, and writing them down countless of times is how I memorize them and attain muscle memory. Not that I’m not happy that I can read about 700, whereas I can write about 500, but there’s just something special about writing them. I don’t know, maybe this will go away with time, I’ve only been studying for a year… but I guess it’s just down to someone’s preference. In addition to what I’ve said, I want to excel in calligraphy, so knowing how to write them properly is essential. For someone who isn’t studying Japanese in college, and who simply wants to be able to read and communicate, I suppose knowing how to write is almost completely unnecessary, a fact that will probably make a lot of people frantically jump up and down with happiness. :D

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Michael-Robson/543560150 Michael Robson

    “And without the prospect of ever living in Japan why would I need to be able to write in Japanese?”

    Huh? You’re learning JP. That’s why you could live in Japan one day! You should definitely consider the real possibility of moving there, or else you can’t really get immersed in the language.

    (Please tell me you’re not just learning JP to play imported video games.)

  • http://twitter.com/pachoozalah Sarah

    For some reason, this is kind of sad to me. I’m not sure why though.

  • http://twitter.com/tonysensei Tony Gonzalez

    You both seem to have missed the point of the article— *the Japanese themselves* (most of whom, believe it or not, are living in Japan, in a very immersive environment) are forgetting how to handwrite kanji, because being able to do so is a much less important skill than it once was. I speak Japanese at home, teach it at a university, and do translation work on the side. Still, the only time I ever handwrite Japanese is when I’m teaching it to a bunch of Japanese language students who themselves will never need to handwrite it (unless they become Japanese teachers themselves and are forced to teach it to more foreigners, thus perpetuating this stupid cycle… =P )

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    here here to that, and the perpetuation of japanese learning cycles :(

    What causes these cycles to continue? Is it tests? school board requirements?

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    nooooo! Don’t be lazzzy! haha.

    Use all your new-found lazy time to study something that really will make a big difference, is what I’m saying.

    I guess you can take little breaks though… if you have to. Mush… mush!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    I’m sure it’s similar to the sadness I feel when I see American kids writing in l33t speak or when they send me e-mails with crazy shortenings of words. Progress, I suppose, but at the same time us old folks don’t like those darn kids and the ways they’re changing our language!

  • http://twitter.com/PsychoKat21 Kat

    I totally agree. It’s really sad when I can’t read an email written in my own native language because someone has deliberately thrown out all the grammar and spelling they ever learned in school for the sake of sounding cool, or being lazy, or whatever it is that motivates them to use l33t speak. (Which, in my opinion, has the reverse effect of making you sound like a blithering idiot. But, then again, the English we know today was created by common people speaking poorly… a paradox!)

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  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=763958531 Kevin Le Guyader

    I really liked this column! Awesome!

  • Miyavi-saaan~!

    It’s a bit sad, isn’t it?
    I mean being able to write things by hand makes them easier NOT to forget for most(?) people…
    Yes, typing things sure is easier but I think being able to write things by hand is much more fulfilling…

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_P2WKLZ2WGZA4VFDCNK5IRKTKSE Alessa

    i’ve been studying japanese for 4 years now and i know the problem of not remembering kanji when wanting to write them. (especially in situations when you need it the most).
    but i don’t agree with this article 100%. i think it’s important to know how to write kanji properly. if one wants to study japanese, then he/ she should learn (how to write) kanji as well. otherwise it’s like studying english without knowing the alphabet.

    also, i like kanji a lot (even though it takes a lot effort to learn them).

    just my opinion.

    if there are any mistakes i’m sorry, i’m not a native speaker of english.
    alessa

  • Paull

    It still sounds to me like a smart-looking idea that isn’t good in the long term. I think that it’s kinda
    beginnerish thing to want to learn language without really acquiring one of the big parts of it (because in writing the memorization of all the radicals and parts is just half of the success, you also must develop muscle memory and easiness in writing things right and fast). You may say that writing isn’t that important in the first phase of learning languages and I would agree with that in a sense, but I think in a long term most of the students would want to learn the writing, and doing it one more time when one is good in other spheres of the language is quite dull and seems like a handicapped thing. Because really – do you imagine a person that can boast about his hearing
    and listening and speech abilities but writes with a difficultness of a beginner learner?

    I myself tried at first to learn Japanese without writing anything besides kana, and I learn some things that way, but I haven’t really started studying with that passion and motivation of learning about the language and the culture of the country that I love till I decided to tackle the language seriously, with all it’s parts. And especially when it comes to learning Asian languages with other writing systems by a people from the West, this concept of kanjis is so fascinating and artistic that one really may fall in love with it.
    Yeah, I know that I may sound like a kinda conservative know-it-all-better guy that tries to make things harder than they really may be, but I just think that this all-around the world tendency to put less and less importance in language is, beside being sad, just harmful. Language is a part of our life that we shouldn’t sacrifice in any way because it’s so important in so many other spheres of our lives, like social-contact, inteligence, imagination etc.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=754540134 Allison Oldford

    I enjoy handwriting kanji a lot! Sometimes when I get bored at work I can doodle things in Japanese and it makes me feel good. I can’t type in Japanese at work because we’re not cool enough to install it. :P I was a little disappointed to see that you weren’t teaching how to write kanji with textfugu, but for the most part I already understand how it works and have learned a bit already, so I think I’m all set!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    I’m not saying you shouldn’t learn kanji – just the act of handwriting is
    becoming unnecessary (for Japanese people, too). You still have to learn the
    alphabet in order to type it out, and you still have to learn hiragana /
    katakana (and english letters, I suppose) to type Japanese – it’s just that
    now with computers, phones, etc., typing kanji has become so easy and common
    that handwriting is almost never done. It’s like English, for me. I can’t
    spell things correctly when I write by hand. Kanji too, I can’t write
    everything perfectly well either, because I type too often! :)

  • http://www.twitter.com/christaran Chris Taran

    Good riddance to kanji! It needs to completely dissapear! This looks like some promising steps in that direction. ^_^

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    I don’t think it should disappear, just writing by hand needs a little less focus. With kanji, you can type fast, and when you can read it, reading speed is 10x faster than reading English, which is so awesome, I think!

  • Tesapie

    Writing out the kanji by hand helps me memorize them a lot faster and I tend to retain the information better. Also- when I look down at a hand written sheet I’ve just done, I’m like, “Daaayum! I wrote that?” But then again, I’m just on the 1-2 stroke kanji. I’m sure it’ll get real’ old, real’ fast.

  • Haiheli

    I’m learning Japanese to read Murakami Haruki (and other stuff).

  • Haiheli

    Well Tony, your comment even reinforces my position (for leaving the writing of kanji alone) as someone not living in Japan.

  • Haiheli

    It would be nice to be able to write kanji in a great style, even I agree to that. But it is an extra burden if your aim is only to be able to read and listen. After I have mastered Japanese to a reasonable degree I might go for the kanji writing thing, it would be easier then, and begin with a list of the most used kanji.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Anna-Maria-Lokk/573900721 Anna-Maria Lokk

    I like it because my disability sometimes makes it hard for me to write, and my Japanese teacher told me that it’s not a big deal because people use computers for writing. It made me feel better.

  • http://twitter.com/tonysensei Tony Gonzalez

    I think that the cycle is perpetuated largely by old fashioned teachers. When I mentioned that I emphasize reading, and don’t really require much writing in my first year classes, my boss was very displeased. When I explained to him basically the content of this blog post he still insisted that writing was “part of the curriculum at this school”. When I pressed him further, asking *why* it is part of the curriculum, the best he could come up with was that “hand writing kanji is an important part of Japanese culture”. (If I had been in a particularly pissy mood I might have pointed out that tea ceremony, kabuki, heavy social drinking, and ritual suicide are also important parts of Japanese culture, but we don’t make language learners perfect those skills…)

  • http://twitter.com/tonysensei Tony Gonzalez

    What I was trying to point out is that whether you will live in Japan or not is irrelevant—in either case learning to write kanji from memory is just not a useful enough skill to warrant the time it requires, especially for beginner students who, assuming that their goals for language learning is an ability to interact with other people in Japanese, should be focusing on acquiring vocabulary, grammar, conversational skill, etc.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_XOZWERYETE36MWSQ4PXQYOZFKI joey

    lolz i memorize kanji like it’s nobody’s business lolz
    typing japanese to me is kinda annoying… you’re not learning how to write the character which means, later in life when one needs to, they won’t be able to. i just think writing kanji is fun. yes i said it. writing kanji is fun

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_XOZWERYETE36MWSQ4PXQYOZFKI joey

    to me, writing kanji is fun
    i love writing kanji it feels so natural, typing kanji annoys me because i never learn how to actually write the kanji while typing. kanji is really amazing, and by typing it, you’re not really learning anything.

  • Anonymous

    10X I doubt that. No, I’m absolutely sure that you are wrong. In my own life in China I have never observed this and the figures I have seen (for Chinese) puts it less than 2X faster if my memory serves me correctly.

    A 10X advantage, if retention was also 10X faster, would be such a huge advantage that you would see Westerners learning characters in their own language just to read and remember things quicker.

    By the way, I agree that it doesn’t make sense to learn to write characters if all you are ever going to do is read them or write using a keyboard.

  • http://luckyhill.wordpress.com/ elisabel

    I agree, if I don’t write a kanji by hand I don’t remember it at all. It’s the same with taking notes in school. I wrote in a sloppy way but it didn’t matter since the act of writing itself made me remember, not going back to read my notes (which I hardly ever needed to do). Writing is one more way to reinforce language so I don’t think it needs to be tossed out the window UNLESS someone has demonstrated proficiency without it. Since I’ve come to work in Japan I’ve noticed that I’m beginning to learn to recognize more and more kanji that I’ve never written, but I only recognize them in context and without seeing them over and over again I forget them really quickly. Having to look it up each time means it takes me just as long to learn or even longer than if I would just sit down and write it.

    Also, I think that too much dependency on the computer is what leads to people writing things like 「感じは読めない。」It’s a bit hard for me to tell what people are feeling sometimes too, but I’m pretty sure that 99% of the time that sentence is written what was actually intended was 「漢字」.

  • Cg

    「感じは読めない。」
    That phrase is used to say that someone can’t read the mood (like if someone does/says something inappropriate for the situation). It’s not a mistake. A similar phrase is 「空気を読め」 or 「空気が読めない」(where 空気=atmosphere) which you will see all over the place online abbreviated as KY.

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  • http://luckyhill.wordpress.com/ elisabel

    Sorry I should’ve been clear: the times I’ve seen 「感じは読めない」have all been very obvious instances of people who intended to say 漢字. For example, people on an online community I’m on say “I know Japanese!” and so when I write to them in Japanese, they write back 「ごめん、感じは読めない。」or something along those lines.

    I’ve heard KY and granted, thought I was making a little joke because I didn’t know 「感じは読めない」could be used the same as 「空気が読めない」. Either way, my point stands: I’ve seen plenty of people who think the computer will do everything for them make these kinds of mistakes. It’s the same as writing かわいい or おはよう in kanji when these days, as far as I can tell, these words tend to be left in hiragana.

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  • Brandon

    I’ve been studying Japanese for awhile, and it seems like if I write the kanji when first learning it I notice the subtle differences better 千チ牛年. I don’t write them often, but it’s a good initial kick off. Thoughts on muscle memory?

  • http://worldwithinsight.com/ Kyle Greggory

    Dependence on computers terrifies me.

    Also, I’m about to order the new iPod Touch before I move to Tokyo to help me practice Japanese more efficiently XD lol.

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  • Orthography101

    “Hear hear” is the correct phrase.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Hear Hear it is then, thanks!

  • http://mistersanity.blogspot.com Jonadab

    Yeah. The closest equivalent to handwritten kanji in the English speaking world is probably cursive. (Or calligraphy, but nobody mistakes that for a basic communication skill.) I spent tens of thousands of hours in upper elementary school practicing cursive handwriting until my fingers ached and had a funny near-permanent pen-shaped indentation in them. Why, exactly, did my teachers think this was so important? Once I got access to a typewriter (let alone computers), I never handed in a handwritten paper again. The last time I wrote anything other than my signature in cursive, floppy disks were still noticeably floppy. (As for the signature, it’s an illegible scribble. So what? I could just make an X and it would be legally valid.)

    From what I hear, some school districts are *still* torturing gradeschool children with cursive handwriting. I bet some Japanese schools still make the kids write out the kanji by hand, too. Here, kids, here’s a worksheet I copied from a purple-ink mimeograph I found in one of my supervising teacher’s old folders when I was doing my student teaching. I want you to write each of these characters a hundred times, and I’m going to grade you on how *attractive* your handwriting looks.

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  • Florian

    Heising recommends learning kanji through production and not recognition though, right? Is his approach simply outdated nowadays?

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Claire-Webster/754384761 Claire Webster

    I love writing by hand, and I love that I have neat handwriting, in kana as well as in English, so personally I will continue to study writing Kanji. I do agree with the main point of this article though, that it isn’t as important as reading and grammar. I’m doing the JLPT N4 in December so I have to concentrate on rushing through Japanese For Busy People 3 and probably won’t have the time to perfect my writing, but I do feel that learning to “spell” a Kanji helps you to remember it (muscle memory innit) and therefore read it more easily.

  • Dyson sphere

    I just started learning Japanese and looked at some interesting web pages about learning Japanese. I am intending to write some kanas and kanjis down, just so I can memorise them. But I am not going to write a lot.
    But then I wondered, what is the correct way to draw the kanjis and kanas? No one ever tells me exactly which lines comes first, which line comes second. So do I have to guess that all by myself or is it not really that important in which order you draw the lines of the characters?

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