East Asian Calligraphy

In this textbook, brought to you cooperatively by the Korean, Japanese, and Chinese language textbooks, we hope to illustrate some principles of East Asian writing systems that apply to all three languages above.

Whether we are talking about Chinese characters, Japanese kana, or Korean jamo, East Asian writing systems share many similarities, including their stroke forms, basic shapes, and character structure.

Nevertheless, there are also some differences. Not all of the lessons in this textbook apply to all of the languages. Depending on the language that you are learning, you will (fortunately) be able to skip over some lessons and sections.

In the following table of contents, each link is preceded by one or more letters. The letters indicate which writing system each unit applies to. The letters are:
Chinese characters, including Chinese hanzi, Japanese kanji, and Korean hanja
Japanese kana, especially hiragana
Korean hangul

If a lesson isn't required for the language that you're learning, feel free to skip it.

Note that this course is strictly focused on writing nicely and legibly, and is meant as a supplement to the Chinese, Japanese, and Korean wikibooks. It does not teach you the actual characters / kana / hangul themselves.

CJK Cover
CJK Introduction 介绍 介紹 紹介 소개
CJK History 历史 歷史 歴史 역사
 
CJK Unit 1Basic strokes
CJK Lesson 1The dot
CJK Lesson 2The horizontal stroke
CJK Lesson 3The vertical stroke
CJK Lesson 4The left falling stroke
CJ Lesson 5The right falling stroke
CJK Lesson 6The right rising stroke
CJ Lesson 7Hook strokes
CJK Lesson 8Sharp bends
CJK Lesson 9Smooth bends
K Lesson 10The circle
J Lesson 11Cursive strokes
 
CJK Unit 2Basic shapes
CJK Lesson 1Basic stroke order
K Lesson 2List of shapes found in Korean jamo
J Lesson 3List of shapes found in Japanese hiragana
J Lesson 4List of shapes found in Japanese katakana
C Lesson 5List of shapes found in Chinese radicals
 
CJK Unit 3Putting everything together
CJK Lesson 1Fitting into a square
CJK Lesson 2Balance and style
CJK Lesson 3Ways to practice
CJK Lesson 4Going cursive
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