Gulliver's Travels
What do the Flappers represent?
Part three in book.
Part three in book.
As soon as Gulliver steps onto the floating island, he is surrounded by a crowd of people. He finds them very strange even though they are of a size similar to his. Their heads are slanted to the left or right, and their clothes have pictures of either musical instruments or astronomical signs.
Gulliver learns that he is on Laputa. The people here have terribly short attention spans, so they carry around "Flappers." These are used for hitting other people during conversation in order to keep them focused. Specifically servants carried "flappers"to strike their masters before their mind wandered off during a conversation. This satirizes the disconnection between the rich and everybody else in society.
My name is Barry Allen and I am the fastest man alive.
Zoom: Never Forget, I am the Fastest Flapper Alive
Therefore the flappers represent Zoom from the Flash