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2005 Nobel Prize In Literature Today Before 1100 GMT

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  • 2005 Nobel Prize In Literature Today Before 1100 GMT

    2005 NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE TODAY BEFORE 1100 GMT

    EiTB, Spain
    Oct 13 2005

    Still, Swedish media was buzzing with names like Adonis, whose real
    name is Ali Ahmad Said, who fled Lebanon in the 1980s and now lives
    in Paris.

    A row over last year's winner has done nothing to stifle rampant
    speculation about who may win the 2005 Nobel Prize in literature with
    late buzz leaning toward Syrian poet Adonis or controversial Turkish
    writer Orhan Pamuk.

    But trying to divine who the winner may be is a futile undertaking.

    The Swedish Academy will not even say who it has considered, much
    less who was nominated.

    Contenders

    Still, Swedish media was buzzing with names like Adonis, whose real
    name is Ali Ahmad Said, who fled Lebanon in the 1980s and now lives
    in Paris. Betting Web site Ladbrokes even gave him the best odds,
    7-4, just ahead of Americans Joyce Carol Oates (7-1) and Philip Roth,
    and Swedish poet Thomas Transtromer (both 9-1).

    Pamuk, who faces prison after he was charged with insulting Turkish
    identity for supporting Armenian claims that they were the victims
    of genocide under the Ottoman Turks in 1915, could be tapped, too,
    pundits and papers said, citing only their own speculation and
    educated guesses.

    Other contenders include South Korean poet Ko Un, Canadian author
    Margaret Atwood, the Czech Republic's Milan Kundera, Belgian poet Hugo
    Claus, Italian poet Claudio Magris and Indonesian novelist Pramoedya
    Ananta Toer.

    Others, however, said the academy could look inward, citing Transtromer
    and Danish poet Inger Christiansen.

    Margaretha Fahlgren, a literary professor at Uppsala University,
    said Transtromer, a perennial favourite, would bring the prize back
    home to Sweden.

    Imaginative literature of fiction

    The last time Swedes won was in 1974 when Eyvind Johnson and Harry
    Martinson shared the prize. But she was sure the academy would not
    look to non-fiction as a possible winner, as some pundits have claimed.

    "I believe the prize will be for work of imaginative literature, of
    fiction," Fahlgren told The Associated Press. Whatever the academy
    decides, it will likely have two immediate consequences: increased
    book sales and controversy.

    Last year's winner, Austrian feminist Elfriede Jelinek, drew such
    ire that a member of the academy publicly blasted his colleagues for
    picking her.

    Knut Ahnlund, 82, who has not played an active role in the academy
    since 1996, resigned Tuesday after he wrote in a signed newspaper
    article that picking Jelinek had caused "irreparable damage" to the
    award's reputation.

    The academy, founded in 1786 by King Gustav III to advance the Swedish
    language and its literature, has handed out the literature prize since
    1901. Its current members, who serve for life, include several writers
    as well as linguists, literary scholars, historians and a lawyer.

    If a candidate receives more than half of the votes, the winner is
    picked and announced on a Thursday in October.
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