Together with Marc-Antoine Mahieu (INALCO), and in collaboration with the author, Henitiuk in 2021 brought out the first full critical edition of any Indigenous author in Canada, translating Markoosie Patsauq's 1969-70 Umarjursiutik unaatuinnamut as Hunter with Harpoon/Chasseur au Harpon (2021), which has been described as "one of the most complete and far-reaching critical editions of a text directly uttered-even if in writing-in any North American Native language". Trade editions, featuring a preface by the Inuit leader
Mary Simon, have also been released in English as well as in French, for readers in both France and Quebec. Henitiuk and Mahieu have also published on topics such as representing experiential knowledge. Henitiuk has authored a monograph on liminal imagery in a cross-cultural selection of women's writing and another book, designed to assist in the teaching of translation, looks at some fifty different translations from Japanese of a single passage from
The Pillow Book. She has also co-edited two collections of stories by women from India, and a collection of critical essays on
W. G. Sebald. Henitiuk has also published scholarly articles on a variety of subjects including the translation of Inuit literature, women's writing, the introduction of classical
Japanese literature into the west, and comparisons between eastern and western texts. Her first major, and most frequently cited, article is "Translating Woman", an analysis of gender translation issues which she has continued to explore during her research. She has also discussed feminist aspects of literature in the context of magic realism. Recent scholarship has concentrated on examinations of the way translations of 10th-century Japanese women's writing has entered the western consciousness and the political/cultural dimensions of translation of such work. Book chapters have analyzed boundary metaphors in
Elizabeth Inchbald and rape as a motif in literature. Other chapters discuss gender aspects in
The Tale of Genji,
The Kagerô Nikki and
The Pillow Book of Sei Shônagon. == Public service ==