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Abstract This article examines the intersections of literary theory, institutional knowledge production, and Marxist cultural policy in socialist Poland during the 1960s, focusing on the intellectual project led by Stefan Żółkiewski. It reconstructs the network of research initiatives, seminars, and editorial ventures that surrounded Żółkiewski, interpreting them as ›implicit seminars‹ – informal yet epistemically productive formations that operated across the boundaries of academia, politics, and ideology. Drawing on the cultural studies of science, biography, and microhistory, the article argues that Żółkiewski’s model of cultural research synthesised Marxism, cybernetics, semiotics, and sociology into a distinctive mode of scholarly practice aimed at reforming cultural policy from within the socialist system. The conceptual framework proposed here, based on the Polish notion of uwikłanie (›entanglement‹ or ›implication‹), serves to integrate textual, institutional, and affective dimensions of intellectual life, revealing how theory and biography become mutually constitutive. In this perspective, Żółkiewski’s work emerges as a paradigmatic case of collective intellectual labour, in which the seminar functions as a distributed cognitive system producing shared concepts, methods, and affective solidarities. By analysing his collaboration with scholars such as Maria Renata Mayenowa (literary studies), Zygmunt Bauman (sociology), Witold Kula (history), and Leszek Kołakowski (philosophy), the article demonstrates that Żółkiewski’s thought was rooted in a broader effort to ›intellectualise‹ socialist governance through expert knowledge. Rather than treating socialist-era humanities as ideologically constrained, the study interprets some practices as a historically situated experiment in integrating theoretical reflection with social engagement. The article thus contributes to a broader reconsideration of the humanities under socialism as a site of methodological innovation and collective creativity, challenging dichotomies that oppose ideology to critique and conformity to dissent.