[1] In July 1928, at the Santa Bárbara Parish Church of Madrid, she married the academic and dean of the Faculty of Arts for the University of Murcia, Cayetano Alcázar Molina [es].
[3] In 1936, at a reception for the opening of the Universidad Popular de Cartagena [es] in the Murcia Region of Spain, Junquera met the writer Carmen Conde Abellán, who had been active in getting the university established.
[6] Within a month of their meeting, Conde was dedicating poems to Junquera, which explicitly described her desire for engaging with Amanda using all of her senses and alluding to Katherine Mansfield in language widely known as lesbian coding in the period.
[7] Just over a year after meeting, in June 1937, the two women planned a holiday together, without their husbands, at Penyal d'Ifac Natural Park in Valencia, where they became lovers.
[3] Because of Spanish law [es] and social custom, the two women were not allowed to divorce or acknowledge their sexuality, which created the need to publicly hide their situation.
These included works by Adriano Augusto Michieli [Wikidata], Marcel Pagnol, Anna Maria Speckel, Alejandro Tassoni Estense, and William Thomas Walsh, among others.
[18] Suffering from a heart condition, Oliver was allowed to return to Madrid in 1945[16] and Conde ostensibly lived with him and his mother in a separate apartment.
[20] Though she was often overshadowed by their fame, both Conde and Alcázar dedicated multiple works to her in recognition of her significance in their own literary productions.