I’ve recently come to be somewhat interested in the historical debate surrounding whether the abolition of kanji would be a positive or negative development for the language and those using it. Admittedly, it doesn’t seem to be much of a debate as of late, but it was carried out in both Vietnam and Korea, which have moved away from using Chinese characters, and the debate has been had in both China and Japan in the past.
There seem to have been two main factions in Japan favoring abolition – those favoring the replacement of kanji and kana with romaji (ローマ字派, the romaji faction), and those favoring the replacement of kanji with the sole use of kana (かな派, the kana faction). There were even organizations set up to promote these positions and convince Japanese society to move away from using kanji, although I can’t really find any major ones active today.
I guess I’m curious to what you all, as learners think. Considering that Japan has achieved high literacy rates while retaining kanji, are the arguments for its abolition simply superfluous and obsolete? Or are there other advantages to abolishing kanji that would warrant reopening this debate? If this is so, would it be better for Japan to adopt romaji, all kana, or another system altogether?
Probably not the most pressing topic to think about when learning Japanese, but considering the unique challenges posed in learning kanji, I'm sure some of you have some opinions on it.
There seem to have been two main factions in Japan favoring abolition – those favoring the replacement of kanji and kana with romaji (ローマ字派, the romaji faction), and those favoring the replacement of kanji with the sole use of kana (かな派, the kana faction). There were even organizations set up to promote these positions and convince Japanese society to move away from using kanji, although I can’t really find any major ones active today.
I guess I’m curious to what you all, as learners think. Considering that Japan has achieved high literacy rates while retaining kanji, are the arguments for its abolition simply superfluous and obsolete? Or are there other advantages to abolishing kanji that would warrant reopening this debate? If this is so, would it be better for Japan to adopt romaji, all kana, or another system altogether?
Probably not the most pressing topic to think about when learning Japanese, but considering the unique challenges posed in learning kanji, I'm sure some of you have some opinions on it.

