This study introduces Theatre of the Silent Space, a conceptual framework that reimagines African performance theory by centring the unseen, the unspoken, and the marginalized. While existing literature on performance in Africa often privileges Western paradigms, this work addresses a critical gap by grounding theatrical expression in African philosophies, cosmologies, and lived realities. Drawing from subaltern studies and postcolonial discourse, the Theatre of the Silent Space repositions performance as a vehicle for resistance, restoration, and social transformation. Through critical discourse analysis, the study explores how this framework amplifies silenced voices, confronts dominant narratives, and fosters holistic healing in African contexts. As both a theoretical and practical contribution, this framework offers a taxonomy for analysing allied theatrical forms that share a commitment to cultural reclamation and social justice. By affirming the voices within marginalized spaces, the Theatre of the Silent Space offers a transformative lens through which to understand, engage, and reshape performance in Africa.
Keywords: African performance, Social Transformation, cultural resistance, marginalization, restorative drama, subaltern theory, theatre of the silent space