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However, Dylan is considered by many prominent literary critics to be a major poet, his song lyrics worthy of serious study. Dylan's literary merits aside, Nobel watchers note that anyone can be nominated for the six Nobel awards in medicine, physics, chemistry, literature, peace and economics, but that doesn't mean they have any chance of winning. The list of unsuccessful peace prize nominees includes dictators Joseph Stalin, Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler. "There are some completely crazy nominations," said Mans Ehrenberg, who sits on the chemistry prize committee. He said occasionally committee members get e-mails "from people who think they should get the prize." That violates a key Nobel rule: you can't nominate yourself. New Zealand literature professor J.M. Brown tried to get around that rule in 1905, when he nominated Godfrey Sweven, which turned out to be his own pseudonym. British wartime leader Winston Churchill missed out on the peace prize despite two nominations, but his oratory and his works of historical scholarship earned him the literature prize in 1953. Spanish poet Angel Guimera y Jorge was nominated for the literature prize 17 consecutive years, but never won. The Swedish Academy receives hundreds of literature nominations every year, whittled down to a shortlist of five names by May. Those authors are studied carefully before a winner is selected in a majority vote. Known in Swedish as "De Aderton" -- the Eighteen -- the academy members are Swedish writers, book critics, linguists and literature professors. Right now there are only 15 active members. One seat is vacant and two members have boycotted meetings since the 1990s because of internal disputes, including over whether the academy should condemn death threats against British writer Salman Rushdie. Englund said there usually is animated discussion between academy members before the vote, though they try to keep things civil. "There are never sort of cutthroat debates and people getting really angry and storming out of the room," he said. ___ On the Net:
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