Conceptualizing and understanding memory in comics inevitably opens up a can of worms, not only because of the inherent monstrosity of the concept of memory, which produces a wide range of vectors (such as individual and collective memory), but also because of the many ways in which comics interact with memory. In this paper, we would like to show how style in comics functions as a node where personal, collective memories meet and interact with the memory of the medium of comics. For this we will turn to Thierry Smolderen’s groundbreaking Origins of Comics (2014), where he advances the notion of “polygraphic humor” to designate how cartoonists of the 19th and early 20th century dialogue with the visual culture of their times, humorously res...