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  • Stampede: Misogyny, White Supremacy, and Settler Colonialism by Kimberly A. Williams
  • Susan L. Joudrey
Kimberly A. Williams, Stampede: Misogyny, White Supremacy, and Settler Colonialism (Halifax & Winnipeg: Fernwood Publishing, 2021)

Kimberly A. Williams' Stampede: Misogyny, White Supremacy, and Settler Colonialism is a very welcome addition to feminist scholarship and the previous analyses dedicated to the Calgary Stampede. Several historians and cultural theorists have explored the significance of the Stampede's legacy to the prairie west, but Williams provides a feminist analysis of a more contemporary iteration of the event, the 2012 centennial celebrations. If, like Williams, you are not from Calgary, or even an Albertan, the Calgary Stampede certainly is a spectacular oddity. Even though she positions herself as an outsider experiencing an unfamiliar cultural event, given that the origin of the Stampede was an echo of the American Wild West shows, Williams might be the perfect person to be asking these important feminist questions.

The book provides a thoughtful consideration of who does and does not benefit from the Calgary Stampede's festivities and pervasive cultural impact. In fact, Williams focuses not only on who is missing from the narrative, but who is harmed by the Stampede. It is difficult to dispute the book's central argument that "… the Calgary Stampede is, at its core, a misogynistic, white supremacist institution that is both a product and an active purveyor of Canada's ongoing settler-colonial project" (2), and Williams uses the book's chapters to great effect in supporting this assertion. The author shows the Stampede to be more than the innocuous [End Page 299] spectacle that many make it out to be, and the book challenges the prevalent celebratory narrative inherent not only in the ten-day event but also in much of the writing dedicated to situating the Calgary Stampede as a cultural icon.

By focusing on what Williams refers to as "Stampede clichés," things that have occurred so frequently and therefore become normalized and divested of original meanings, Stampede restores meaning to the seemingly innocent. She claims that she does not intend to either dismiss or vilify the Calgary Stampede, but hopes to "… encourage a more complex understanding of the ways in which its constructed narrative(s) both helped to create and continue to perpetuate systems and structures in our city that cause many of us to be vulnerable to gender- and race-based violence and exploitation." (17) She accomplishes this by situating the Stampede in the broader context of gender injustice experienced in Calgary. According to Williams, by scrutinising the narrative promoted by the Calgary Stampede, it is possible to reveal the ways in which the event is responsible for creating and maintaining a social, political, and economic environment detrimental to women in Calgary specifically, but across Alberta more broadly.

Throughout the book, Williams uses salient examples from the 2012 Stampede to support these claims. She situates the analysis within settler colonialism, white supremacy, heteropatriarchy, and misogyny. Chapter 2, "Petro-Cowboys and the Frontier Myth," lays the foundation and orients readers to the theoretical underpinnings. While a stronger connection could have been developed between the frontier myth as it applied to the United States and the adoption of the myth by the Canadian prairie west, the chapter succeeds at situating the role of resource extraction in settler colonialism and connects it with the reification of the oil and gas industry at the Calgary Stampede. By continuing this analysis in Chapter 3, "Who's Greatest Together?" Williams' reading of the centennial parade includes an interpretation of militarisation and the connection to oil and gas. This relationship seems so obvious, especially in a settler-colonial society, but very little has been written about these aspects of the Stampede especially as they relate to the parade.

Williams' interpretation of the Stampede Parade also draws attention to both the lack of women participants and the type of femininity that is expected and condoned at the Stampede – a theme that reappears in Chapters 4 and 5. In Chapter 4, "Colonial Redux: The Calgary Stampede's 'Imaginary Indians,'" Williams specifically grapples with First Nations' participation in the Elbow River Camp and the Indian Princess competition. It is...

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