[2] Coming from Chera, Valencia, she moved to Barcelona in 1918 where she came into contact with the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT) and carried out various propaganda campaigns.
Ródenas, who participated in committees to help prisoners, harshly criticized the Ley de Fugas, which had become a way of eliminating people who were against the regime.
When the Spanish Civil War broke out in 1936, she enlisted in the Durruti Column and went to fight on the Zaragoza front with other volunteers from the CNT and the FAI.
[2] Ródenas believed that the destruction of stereotypical gender roles passed through education and actively participated in the tasks of literacy and specialized training of the Casal de la Mujer Trabajadora, where between 600 and 800 women attended classes.
[4] In 1939, she went into exile in France, then in Santo Domingo and finally settled in Mexico from where she was reunited with her young son since, during the war, she had sent her three children to the Soviet Union.