Remembering the Kanji and Remembering the Hanzi

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Remembering the Kanji is a series of three volumes by James Heisig, intended to teach the 3,000 most frequent Kanji to students of the Japanese language. The series is available in English, French, German, Dutch, Spanish, Polish, Portuguese, Hungarian, Italian, Swedish, and Hebrew. [1] There is a supplementary book, Remembering the Kana, which teaches the Japanese syllabaries (hiragana and katakana). Remembering the Hanzi by the same author is intended to teach the 3,000 most frequent Hanzi to students of the Chinese language. This book has two variants: Remembering Simplified Hanzi [2] and Remembering Traditional Hanzi, each in two volumes.

Contents

Methodology

The method differs markedly from traditional rote-memorization techniques practiced in most courses. The course teaches the student to utilize all the constituent parts of a kanji's written form—termed "primitives", combined with a mnemonic device that Heisig refers to as "imaginative memory". Each kanji (and each non-kanji primitive) is assigned a unique keyword. A kanji's written form and its keyword are associated by imagining a scene or story connecting the meaning of the given kanji with the meanings of all the primitives used to write that kanji. The method requires the student to invent their own stories to associate the keyword meaning with the written form. The text presents detailed stories in Part I, proceeding through Part II with less verbose stories. This is to encourage the student to use the stories as practice for creating their own. After the 547 kanji in Parts I and II, the remainder of the kanji in Part III have the component keywords but no stories. However, in cases where the reader may be easily confused or for difficult kanji, Heisig often provides a small story or hint.

All the kanji are analyzed by components—Heisig terms these "primitives"—which may be traditional radicals, other kanji themselves, or a collection of strokes not normally identified as independent entities. The basic primitives are introduced as needed throughout the book. This order is designed to introduce the kanji efficiently by building upon the primitives and kanji already learned, rather than learning the kanji based on the order of their frequency or the dictates of the jōyō kanji grading system. In volume 2, Heisig groups roughly half the kanji according to "signal primitives" that signal a certain Chinese reading (cf radical). There will be one or more exceptions to this rule. These are presented by Heisig in an increasing order of difficulty. The remainder of the Chinese readings are introduced in separate chapters, designed to help the student learn the readings from everyday words and useful compounds.

Volume 1

Remembering the Kanji 1
Remembering Kanji 1.gif
The cover of the 5th Edition.
Author James W. Heisig
Country United States
Language English, with translations into Dutch, French, Spanish, Polish, Portuguese, German, Italian, Hungarian, and Hebrew. [3]
SeriesRemembering the Kanji
PublisherUniversity of Hawai'i Press
Publication date
Sixth Edition: 3rd printing, 2015. Fifth Edition: 2008
Pages484 (6th edition)
ISBN 978-0-8248-3592-7

The first book in the series, commonly known as RTK1, was originally published in 1977. The sixth edition of the book was released in 2011. In the book, Heisig presents a method for learning how to associate the meaning and writing of 2,200 kanji, including most of the jōyō kanji. There is no attention given to the readings of the kanji as Heisig believes that one should learn the writing and meaning first before moving on to the readings in Volume II.

Sixth Edition

A sixth edition was released in April 2011. The sixth edition includes corrections for all errata [4] from prior editions, as well as additional kanji from the 2010 significant revision to the Jōyō kanji. The additional kanji in the sixth edition have also been made into a supplement for older editions. [5] Likewise, RTK2 and RTK3 have been updated in 2012 to reflect these changes.

Volume 2

Remembering the Kanji 2
Author James W. Heisig
Country United States
Language English, with translations into Spanish and German. [6]
SeriesRemembering the Kanji
PublisherUniversity of Hawai'i Press
Publication date
Fourth Edition: 1st printing, April 2012. Third Edition: 13th printing, 2008
Pages405 (4th edition)
ISBN 978-0-8248-3669-6

The second book in the series, often referred to as RTK2, is the second in the Remembering the Kanji. Volume II presents the official readings of the kanji introduced in Volume I.

Differences from Volume I

Unlike the first volume, this book does not rely on "imaginative memory". The book is mainly focused on the Chinese readings, however one chapter does suggest a mnemonic device for learning the Japanese readings. Heisig splits the kanji into various chapters, according to the most appropriate method to learn their readings. For each Chinese reading of a kanji, an example compound word is given.

Volume 3

Remembering the Kanji 3
Author James W. Heisig
Country United States
Language English
SeriesRemembering the Kanji
PublisherUniversity of Hawai'i Press
Publication date
Third edition: 1st printing, 2012. Second edition: 2nd printing, 2008
Pages360 pages (3rd edition)
ISBN 978-0-8248-3702-0

The third book, commonly referred to as RTK3, is the third in the Remembering the Kanji book series by James Heisig. This volume was co-authored by Tanya Sienko.

Volume 3 presents a further 800 kanji in addition to the 2,200 kanji introduced in Volume 1 and Volume 2. It is split into two parts. The first part is in the style of Volume I, where the writing and keywords are learned. The majority of the new kanji are introduced according to their traditional radical. The other part is in a similar style to Volume 2, where the readings of the kanji are learned.

Remembering the Kana

Remembering the Kana: A Guide to Reading and Writing the Japanese Syllabaries in 3 hours each [7] is a book by James Heisig for remembering hiragana and katakana. It uses mostly the same imaginative memory technique as Remembering the Kanji I, though some katakana are prompted to be learned as simplified forms of their hiragana counterparts.

Remembering the Kana succeeds the book Remembering the Hiragana: A Complete Course on How to Teach Yourself the Japanese Syllabary in 3 Hours, [6] which only taught the hiragana (and not the katakana).

Remembering the Hanzi

Heisig and Timothy Richardson have also written Remembering Simplified Hanzi 1 [8] and Remembering Traditional Hanzi 1, [9] which apply the same method to Chinese. Volume 2 of each book was published in 2012. [10] [11]

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Hiragana is a Japanese syllabary, part of the Japanese writing system, along with katakana as well as kanji.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kanji</span> Chinese characters used in Japanese writing

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Iteration mark</span> Character or punctuation mark used to represent a duplicated character or word

Iteration marks are characters or punctuation marks that represent a duplicated character or word.

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<i>Ateji</i> Kanji used for some Japanese words in a primarily phonetic sense

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The Japanese script reform is the attempt to correlate standard spoken Japanese with the written word, which began during the Meiji period. This issue is known in Japan as the kokugo kokuji mondai. The reforms led to the development of the modern Japanese written language, and explain the arguments for official policies used to determine the usage and teaching of kanji rarely used in Japan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chinese family of scripts</span> Writing systems descended from oracle bone script

The Chinese family of scripts are writing systems descended from the Chinese oracle bone script and used for a variety of languages in East Asia. They include logosyllabic systems such as the Chinese script itself, and adaptations to other languages, such as kanji (Japanese), Hanja (Korean), chữ Hán and chữ Nôm (Vietnamese), Sawgun and Sawndip (Zhuang) and Bowen (Bai). More divergent are Tangut, Khitan large script, and its offspring Jurchen, as well as the Yi script, the Sui script and Geba script, which were inspired by Chinese although not directly descended from it. The partially deciphered Khitan small script may be another. In addition, various phonetic scripts descend from Chinese characters, of which the best known are the various kana syllabaries, the semi-syllabary bopomofo, nüshu, and lisu.

References

  1. "Remembering the Kanji 1 | Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture". nirc.nanzan-u.ac.jp. Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  2. Heisig, James W.; Richardson, Timothy W. (2009). Remembering Simplified Hanzi 1 (PDF). Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN   978-0-8248-3323-7.
  3. "Remembering the Kanji 1 | Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture". nirc.nanzan-u.ac.jp.
  4. Heisig, James W. "Remembering the Kanji vol. 1 - Cumulative list of all errata in editions prior to the 6th Edition" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-03-22. Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  5. Heisig, James W. "Remembering the Kanji vol. 1 - Supplement - Newly Approved General-Use Kanji" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-07-04. Retrieved 2022-07-03.
  6. 1 2 "James W. Heisig — List of Publications 業績表" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-09. Retrieved 2011-01-05.
  7. Heisig, James W. (2007). Remembering the kana : a guide to reading and writing the Japanese syllabaries in 3 hours each ; part one hiragana, part two katakana. Helmut Morsbach, Kazue Kurebayashi (3rd ed.). Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN   978-0-8248-3164-6. OCLC   77573871.
  8. Heisig, James W. (2009). Remembering simplified Hanzi : how not to forget the meaning and writing of Chinese characters. Timothy W. Richardson. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN   978-0-8248-3323-7. OCLC   236142649.
  9. Heisig, James W. (2009). Remembering traditional Hanzi : how not to forget the meaning and writing of Chinese characters. Timothy W. Richardson. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN   978-0-8248-3324-4. OCLC   856071205.
  10. Heisig, James W. (2012). Remembering Simplified Hanzi 2: How Not to Forget the Meaning and Writing of Chinese Characters. Timothy W. Richardson. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN   9780824836559. OCLC   1138666474.
  11. Heisig, James W. (2012). Remembering Traditional Hanzi 2: How Not to Forget the Meaning and Writing of Chinese Characters. Timothy W. Richardson. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN   9780824836566. OCLC   779875983.