At the founding of the United Nations she served as delegate to the UN Commission on the Status of Women during the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Her family moved to Mexico City and González continued her education at the School of Higher Studies and the National Conservatory of Music.
She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree,[3] later enrolled in the Escuela Superior to study English,[2] and married the historian Luis Castillo Ledón [es].
[4] She founded the Teatro de Masas[5] and began publishing her writings with the release of Cuando las hojas caen in 1929.
[2] In 1958, Lopez Mateos appointed her as the Undersecretary of Cultural Affairs of the Secretariat of Public Education, making her the first woman to hold that rank.