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Eva Carrière

Eva Carrière (born Marthe Béraud 1886 in France, died 1943),[1] also known as Eva C, was a fraudulent materialization medium in the early 20th century known for making fake ectoplasm from chewed paper and cut-out faces from magazines and newspapers.

Censored photo of Carrière nude in a séance with a cardboard cut-out figure of King Ferdinand of Bulgaria

Biography

Béraud was born 1886 in France, the daughter of a French officer.[2][3] She became engaged to Maurice Noël, a soldier who died in the Congo from tropical disease in 1904 before the marriage could take place. Béraud lived with General Elie Noël and his wife at Villa Carmen in Algiers. She claimed she developed her psychic ability after the death of her fiancé.[4]

In 1905, she held a series of séances at Villa Carmen and sitters were invited. In these séances she claimed to materialize a spirit called Bien Boa, a 300-year-old Brahmin Hindu. However, photographs taken of Boa looked like the figure was made from a large cardboard cutout.[5] In other sittings Charles Richet reported that Boa was breathing, had moved around the room and had touched him. A photograph revealed Boa to be a man dressed up in a cloak, helmet and beard.[6]

A newspaper article in 1906 revealed that an Arab coachman known as Areski, who had previously worked at the villa, had been hired to play the part of Bien Boa and that the entire thing was a hoax. Areski wrote that he made his appearance into the room by a trapdoor. Béraud also admitted to being involved with the hoax.[7]

In 1909, Béraud changed her name to Eva Carrière (Eva C) to hide the fraud of her past and began a new career as a psychic.[8] Béraud had a sexual relationship with a woman 25 years her elder, Juliette Bisson (1861–1956), with whom she performed during her seances.[9]

Beraud died in 1943.[1]

Investigations

Carrière's psychic performances were investigated by Arthur Conan Doyle, author of the Sherlock Holmes mystery series.[10] He believed that her performances were genuine and that she was not engaged in any deception. Another famous psychic investigator of the time, Harry Houdini, observed one of her séances and asserted that they were fraudulent. Houdini was never convinced by Carrière and likened her performance to a magician's trick, the Hindu needle trick.[11]

The physician-psychical researcher Gustav Geley investigated Carrière and wrote she was a genuine psychic but never-published photographs were discovered after Geley's death which revealed fraudulent activity from the psychic's companion, Juliette Bisson, such as wires seen running from Carrière's head supporting fake ectoplasm.[12] Another physician-psychical researcher, Albert von Schrenck-Notzing, investigated Carrière and believed the ectoplasm she produced was genuine. The psychiatrist Mathilde Ludendorff wrote that the experiments of Schrenck-Notzing were unscientific and that he had been duped by tricks of Carrière.[13] In the Schrenck-Notzing psychic sessions with Carrière the scientific controls were scarce and there was evidence that she had freed her hands in the séance room.[14]

Carrière has been described as "perverse and neurotic".[15] She was well known for running around the séance room naked indulging in sexual activities with her audience. Her companion Juliette Bisson would, during the course of the séance sittings with Schrenck-Notzing, introduce her finger into Eva's vagina to ensure no "ectoplasm" had been loaded there beforehand to fool the investigators, and she would also strip nude at the end of a séance and demanded another full-on gynecological exam.[9] The psychic sessions of Carrière with Schrenck-Notzing have been described as pornographic. The photographs that were taken during the séances show Carrière in the nude emerging from her cabinet and others revealing fake ectoplasm strings hanging from her breasts. Another photograph revealed ectoplasm in the shape of a deflated and disembodied penis.[16] According to historian Ruth Brandon, Juliette Bisson and Carrière were in a sexual relationship together, and they worked in collaboration with each other to fake the ectoplasm and eroticize their male audience.[17]

In 1920, anthropologist Eric Dingwall and physician-psychical researcher V. J. Woolley tested Carrière in London. They found no evidence of psychic phenomena, discovered that her ectoplasm was made from chewed paper, and said "the séances proved negative".[18] Ruth Brandon wrote that Carrière produced some of her effects by regurgitation, hiding her ectoplasm in the séance cabinet and using her secret accomplice Juliette Bisson.[17]

According to Harry Price, the photographs of her ectoplasm taken with Schrenck-Notzing looked artificial and two-dimensional, made from cardboard and newspaper portraits, and that there were no scientific controls, as both her hands were free. In 1920, Carrière was investigated by the Society for Psychical Research (SPR) in London. She was also investigated in 1922 and the result of the tests were negative.[19]

In 1954, Donald West wrote that Carrière's ectoplasm was made of cut-out paper faces from magazines and newspapers, on which fold marks could sometimes be seen from the photographs. A photograph of Carrière taken from the back of the ectoplasm face revealed it was made from a magazine cut out, complete with the letters "Le Miro". The two-dimensional face had been clipped from the French magazine Le Miroir.[20] Back issues of the magazine also matched some of Carrière's ectoplasm faces.[21] In 1913, a Miss Barkley in an article in the newspaper Neue Wiener Tagblatt exposed the fraud of Carrière:

Miss Eva prepared the heads before every séance, and endeavoured to make them unrecognizable. A clean-shaven face was decorated with a beard. Grey hairs became black curls, a broad forehead was made into a narrow one. In spite of all her endeavours, she could not obliterate certain characteristic lines.[17]

Carrière used cut out faces of Woodrow Wilson, King Ferdinand of Bulgaria, French president Raymond Poincaré, and the actress Mona Delza.[22]

Also in 1954, Rudolf Lambert, an SPR member, published details of fraud which had been covered up by many early members of the Institute Metapsychique International (IMI).[23] Lambert had studied Gustav Geley's files on Eva Carrière, and discovered photographs taken by her companion Juliette Bisson depicting fraudulent ectoplasm.[23] Various "materializations" were artificially attached to Eva's hair by wires. Geley never published his discovery. Eugéne Osty, the director of the Institute, and members Jean Meyer, Albert von Schrenck-Notzing and Charles Richet all knew about the fraudulent photographs, but were firm believers in spirituality phenomena, so demanded the scandal be kept secret.[23]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Erotic Ectoplasmic Birth: Vaginas and Scientific Probing in the Age of Spiritualism". Retrieved 18 August 2019.
  2. ^ McCabe, Joseph. (1920). Spiritualism: A Popular History from 1847. Dodd, Mead & Company. p. 226
  3. ^ Room, Adrian. (2010). Dictionary of Pseudonyms: 13,000 Assumed Names and Their Origins, 5th ed. McFarland. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-7864-4373-4
  4. ^ Lewis Spence. (2010). Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Kessinger Publishing. p. 310. ISBN 978-1161361827
  5. ^ Raymond Buckland. (2005). The Spirit Book: The Encyclopedia of Clairvoyance, Channeling, and Spirit Communication. Visible Ink Press. p. 131. ISBN 978-1578592135
  6. ^ M. Brady Brower. (2010). Unruly Spirits: The Science of Psychic Phenomena in Modern France. University of Illinois Press. p. 84-86. ISBN 978-0252077517
  7. ^ Peter H. Aykroyd, Angela Narth and Dan Aykroyd. (2009). A History of Ghosts: The True Story of Séances, psychics, Ghosts, and Ghostbusters. Rodale Books. p. 59. ISBN 978-1605298757
  8. ^ Sofie Lachapelle. (2011). Investigating the Supernatural: From Spiritism and Occultism to Psychical Research and Metapsychics in France, 1853-1931. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 110. ISBN 978-1421400136
  9. ^ a b Kalush (2006). The Secret Life of Houdini: The Making of America's First Superhero. Atria Books. p. 419. ISBN 978-0743272087
  10. ^ Jack and Beverly's Spirit Photographs
  11. ^ Harry Houdini. (2011). A Magician among the Spirits (Cambridge Library Collection - Spiritualism and Esoteric Knowledge). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1108027489
  12. ^ See the entry for ectoplasm in J. Gordon Melton. (2007). The Encyclopedia of Religious Phenomena. Visible Ink Press. ISBN 978-1578592098
  13. ^ Sommer, A (2012). "Policing epistemic deviance: Albert Von Schrenck-Notzing and Albert Moll(1)". Med Hist. 56 (2): 255–76. doi:10.1017/mdh.2011.36. PMC 3381523. PMID 23002296.
  14. ^ Peter H. Aykroyd, Angela Narth. (2009). A History of Ghosts: The True Story of Séances, psychics, Ghosts, and Ghostbusters. Rodale Books. p. 62. ISBN 978-1605298757
  15. ^ Spirit Summonings. Time-Life Books. 1989. p. 64. ISBN 978-0809463442
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-05-12. Retrieved 2013-02-02.
  17. ^ a b c Ruth Brandon. (1983). The Spiritualists: The Passion for the Occult in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. pp. 152-160. ISBN 0-297-78249-5
  18. ^ Simeon Edmunds. (1966). Spiritualism: A Critical Survey. Aquarian Press. pp. 110-111. ISBN 978-0850300130 "In 1920 Eva C came to London at the invitation of the SPR. Forty séances, held under the direction of Dr. E. J. Dingwall and Dr. J. V. Woolley, proved entirely negative. The small amount of 'ectoplasm' produced proved on analysis to be nothing more than chewed up paper."
  19. ^ Harry Price. (1939). Fifty Years of Psychical Research. Longmans, Green & Co. ISBN 978-0766142428
  20. ^ Donald J. West. (1954). Psychical Research Today. Chapter Séance-Room Phenomena. Duckworth. p. 49
  21. ^ Georgess McHargue. (1972). Facts, Frauds, and Phantasms: A Survey of the Spiritualist Movement. Doubleday. p. 187
  22. ^ Gordon Stein. (1996). The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal. Prometheus Books. p. 520. ISBN 978-1573920216
  23. ^ a b c Sofie Lachapelle. (2011). Investigating the Supernatural: From Spiritism and Occultism to Psychical Research and Metapsychics in France, 1853-1931. Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 144-145. ISBN 978-1421400136

Further reading

External links

  • Eva C by C. M. de Heredia

carrière, born, marthe, béraud, 1886, france, died, 1943, also, known, fraudulent, materialization, medium, early, 20th, century, known, making, fake, ectoplasm, from, chewed, paper, faces, from, magazines, newspapers, censored, photo, carrière, nude, séance, . Eva Carriere born Marthe Beraud 1886 in France died 1943 1 also known as Eva C was a fraudulent materialization medium in the early 20th century known for making fake ectoplasm from chewed paper and cut out faces from magazines and newspapers Censored photo of Carriere nude in a seance with a cardboard cut out figure of King Ferdinand of Bulgaria Contents 1 Biography 2 Investigations 3 Gallery 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography EditBeraud was born 1886 in France the daughter of a French officer 2 3 She became engaged to Maurice Noel a soldier who died in the Congo from tropical disease in 1904 before the marriage could take place Beraud lived with General Elie Noel and his wife at Villa Carmen in Algiers She claimed she developed her psychic ability after the death of her fiance 4 In 1905 she held a series of seances at Villa Carmen and sitters were invited In these seances she claimed to materialize a spirit called Bien Boa a 300 year old Brahmin Hindu However photographs taken of Boa looked like the figure was made from a large cardboard cutout 5 In other sittings Charles Richet reported that Boa was breathing had moved around the room and had touched him A photograph revealed Boa to be a man dressed up in a cloak helmet and beard 6 A newspaper article in 1906 revealed that an Arab coachman known as Areski who had previously worked at the villa had been hired to play the part of Bien Boa and that the entire thing was a hoax Areski wrote that he made his appearance into the room by a trapdoor Beraud also admitted to being involved with the hoax 7 In 1909 Beraud changed her name to Eva Carriere Eva C to hide the fraud of her past and began a new career as a psychic 8 Beraud had a sexual relationship with a woman 25 years her elder Juliette Bisson 1861 1956 with whom she performed during her seances 9 Beraud died in 1943 1 Investigations EditCarriere s psychic performances were investigated by Arthur Conan Doyle author of the Sherlock Holmes mystery series 10 He believed that her performances were genuine and that she was not engaged in any deception Another famous psychic investigator of the time Harry Houdini observed one of her seances and asserted that they were fraudulent Houdini was never convinced by Carriere and likened her performance to a magician s trick the Hindu needle trick 11 The physician psychical researcher Gustav Geley investigated Carriere and wrote she was a genuine psychic but never published photographs were discovered after Geley s death which revealed fraudulent activity from the psychic s companion Juliette Bisson such as wires seen running from Carriere s head supporting fake ectoplasm 12 Another physician psychical researcher Albert von Schrenck Notzing investigated Carriere and believed the ectoplasm she produced was genuine The psychiatrist Mathilde Ludendorff wrote that the experiments of Schrenck Notzing were unscientific and that he had been duped by tricks of Carriere 13 In the Schrenck Notzing psychic sessions with Carriere the scientific controls were scarce and there was evidence that she had freed her hands in the seance room 14 Carriere has been described as perverse and neurotic 15 She was well known for running around the seance room naked indulging in sexual activities with her audience Her companion Juliette Bisson would during the course of the seance sittings with Schrenck Notzing introduce her finger into Eva s vagina to ensure no ectoplasm had been loaded there beforehand to fool the investigators and she would also strip nude at the end of a seance and demanded another full on gynecological exam 9 The psychic sessions of Carriere with Schrenck Notzing have been described as pornographic The photographs that were taken during the seances show Carriere in the nude emerging from her cabinet and others revealing fake ectoplasm strings hanging from her breasts Another photograph revealed ectoplasm in the shape of a deflated and disembodied penis 16 According to historian Ruth Brandon Juliette Bisson and Carriere were in a sexual relationship together and they worked in collaboration with each other to fake the ectoplasm and eroticize their male audience 17 In 1920 anthropologist Eric Dingwall and physician psychical researcher V J Woolley tested Carriere in London They found no evidence of psychic phenomena discovered that her ectoplasm was made from chewed paper and said the seances proved negative 18 Ruth Brandon wrote that Carriere produced some of her effects by regurgitation hiding her ectoplasm in the seance cabinet and using her secret accomplice Juliette Bisson 17 According to Harry Price the photographs of her ectoplasm taken with Schrenck Notzing looked artificial and two dimensional made from cardboard and newspaper portraits and that there were no scientific controls as both her hands were free In 1920 Carriere was investigated by the Society for Psychical Research SPR in London She was also investigated in 1922 and the result of the tests were negative 19 In 1954 Donald West wrote that Carriere s ectoplasm was made of cut out paper faces from magazines and newspapers on which fold marks could sometimes be seen from the photographs A photograph of Carriere taken from the back of the ectoplasm face revealed it was made from a magazine cut out complete with the letters Le Miro The two dimensional face had been clipped from the French magazine Le Miroir 20 Back issues of the magazine also matched some of Carriere s ectoplasm faces 21 In 1913 a Miss Barkley in an article in the newspaper Neue Wiener Tagblatt exposed the fraud of Carriere Miss Eva prepared the heads before every seance and endeavoured to make them unrecognizable A clean shaven face was decorated with a beard Grey hairs became black curls a broad forehead was made into a narrow one In spite of all her endeavours she could not obliterate certain characteristic lines 17 Carriere used cut out faces of Woodrow Wilson King Ferdinand of Bulgaria French president Raymond Poincare and the actress Mona Delza 22 Also in 1954 Rudolf Lambert an SPR member published details of fraud which had been covered up by many early members of the Institute Metapsychique International IMI 23 Lambert had studied Gustav Geley s files on Eva Carriere and discovered photographs taken by her companion Juliette Bisson depicting fraudulent ectoplasm 23 Various materializations were artificially attached to Eva s hair by wires Geley never published his discovery Eugene Osty the director of the Institute and members Jean Meyer Albert von Schrenck Notzing and Charles Richet all knew about the fraudulent photographs but were firm believers in spirituality phenomena so demanded the scandal be kept secret 23 Gallery Edit The spirit Bien Boa which was discovered to be a dressed up man Carriere with fake ectoplasm made from the French magazine Le Miroir Carriere during a seance Carriere with fake ectoplasmSee also EditSpirituality Spiritualism PsychokinesisReferences Edit a b Erotic Ectoplasmic Birth Vaginas and Scientific Probing in the Age of Spiritualism Retrieved 18 August 2019 McCabe Joseph 1920 Spiritualism A Popular History from 1847 Dodd Mead amp Company p 226 Room Adrian 2010 Dictionary of Pseudonyms 13 000 Assumed Names and Their Origins 5th ed McFarland p 84 ISBN 978 0 7864 4373 4 Lewis Spence 2010 Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology Kessinger Publishing p 310 ISBN 978 1161361827 Raymond Buckland 2005 The Spirit Book The Encyclopedia of Clairvoyance Channeling and Spirit Communication Visible Ink Press p 131 ISBN 978 1578592135 M Brady Brower 2010 Unruly Spirits The Science of Psychic Phenomena in Modern France University of Illinois Press p 84 86 ISBN 978 0252077517 Peter H Aykroyd Angela Narth and Dan Aykroyd 2009 A History of Ghosts The True Story of Seances psychics Ghosts and Ghostbusters Rodale Books p 59 ISBN 978 1605298757 Sofie Lachapelle 2011 Investigating the Supernatural From Spiritism and Occultism to Psychical Research and Metapsychics in France 1853 1931 Johns Hopkins University Press p 110 ISBN 978 1421400136 a b Kalush 2006 The Secret Life of Houdini The Making of America s First Superhero Atria Books p 419 ISBN 978 0743272087 Jack and Beverly s Spirit Photographs Harry Houdini 2011 A Magician among the Spirits Cambridge Library Collection Spiritualism and Esoteric Knowledge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1108027489 See the entry for ectoplasm in J Gordon Melton 2007 The Encyclopedia of Religious Phenomena Visible Ink Press ISBN 978 1578592098 Sommer A 2012 Policing epistemic deviance Albert Von Schrenck Notzing and Albert Moll 1 Med Hist 56 2 255 76 doi 10 1017 mdh 2011 36 PMC 3381523 PMID 23002296 Peter H Aykroyd Angela Narth 2009 A History of Ghosts The True Story of Seances psychics Ghosts and Ghostbusters Rodale Books p 62 ISBN 978 1605298757 Spirit Summonings Time Life Books 1989 p 64 ISBN 978 0809463442 Bawdy Technologies and the Birth of Ectoplasm By L Anne Delgado Archived from the original on 2013 05 12 Retrieved 2013 02 02 a b c Ruth Brandon 1983 The Spiritualists The Passion for the Occult in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Weidenfeld and Nicolson pp 152 160 ISBN 0 297 78249 5 Simeon Edmunds 1966 Spiritualism A Critical Survey Aquarian Press pp 110 111 ISBN 978 0850300130 In 1920 Eva C came to London at the invitation of the SPR Forty seances held under the direction of Dr E J Dingwall and Dr J V Woolley proved entirely negative The small amount of ectoplasm produced proved on analysis to be nothing more than chewed up paper Harry Price 1939 Fifty Years of Psychical Research Longmans Green amp Co ISBN 978 0766142428 Donald J West 1954 Psychical Research Today Chapter Seance Room Phenomena Duckworth p 49 Georgess McHargue 1972 Facts Frauds and Phantasms A Survey of the Spiritualist Movement Doubleday p 187 Gordon Stein 1996 The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal Prometheus Books p 520 ISBN 978 1573920216 a b c Sofie Lachapelle 2011 Investigating the Supernatural From Spiritism and Occultism to Psychical Research and Metapsychics in France 1853 1931 Johns Hopkins University Press pp 144 145 ISBN 978 1421400136Further reading EditRuth Brandon 1983 The Spiritualists The Passion for the Occult in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Alfred E Knopf ISBN 978 0394527406 Joseph McCabe 1920 Is Spiritualism Based On Fraud The Evidence Given By Sir A C Doyle and Others Drastically Examined London Watts amp Co T W Rolleston 1919 Materialisation Phenomena The Hibbert Journal 17 319 321 External links EditEva C by C M de Heredia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eva Carriere amp oldid 1150855872, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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